Until today, all that I knew about Geoff Blum was that he was a utility infielder whose pinch hit home run in the 14th inning won game three of the World Series for the White Sox last year. Via Matthew Hoy, I’ve now learned that he deserves to be honored for a different, more difficult form of heroism. Fifteen months ago,
Kory Blum was approximately 12 weeks into a three-fetus pregnancy. Complications had arisen. The couple was confronted with a scenario: Eliminate the twin fetuses, or risk losing not only the twins, but the third fetus that had shown up in the latest fuzzy picture.
Even if the three survived, the risk of severe brain damage was real – so real, [Geoff] Blum said, that the medical data tilted toward eliminating the twin fetuses by lethalinjection. . . .
Blum said that for three days he and his wife shed tears and stared at the ceiling in their home as they pondered the news.
“It was tough in the sense of trying to make a decision on whose life to keep,” Blum said yesterday. “On the other hand, it's an easy decision. We knew we wanted all three of them.”
There would be no fretting over what might come, he said.
“As soon as we made the decision to go through it, we were 100 percent all the way – nothing in the back of our minds, not at all,” he said.
“What's life if it's easy? What's the point of that?”
On May 3, Kory gave birth to three healthy girls: twins Ava and Audrey, followed by Kayla. They joined oldest daughter Mia Lea, born in2003. . . .
“Thank God we made the decision we made,” Blum said. “We couldn't imagine them not being with us.”
There is no need, I think, to point a moral or adorn the tale.
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