May 18 , 2008
Woody Wolfe
'MUSICIANARY'
WINS HEARTS OF CHILDREN AT
HOSPITALS, AILING YOUNGSTERS KEEP ASKING FOR WOODY WOLFE.
By Michael Vitez,
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Every weekday,
Woody Wolfe does something he thought he never could.
Usually by the
time the sun is up in the Susquehanna River town of Danville, he's
on the road in a 1988 Plymouth Reliant that already has
given him 118,000 miles.
In the backseat is a worn-out guitar, cracked and epoxied
in six places, and
a bulging canvas pack that is his "magic bag."
He might be headed
for Pittsburgh or Hershey or Philadelphia, but the end
of the line is always
the same: a hospital where sick children, many gravely so,
wait for Woody Wolfe to sing to them.
He calls himself
a "musicianary." It's a word he made up for
the callingthat he answered
eight years ago, when he quit his job as a cardiactechnician
and began riding the circuit of pediatric wards acrossPennsylvania.
"The last
place I want to be is with families in the midst of the
mosthorrible sufferings
of their children," he said. "I don't want
to be there.
Yet God has shown
me the most incredible blessings there."
Like in Jake Waltman's
room at St. Christopher's Hospital for Children. In
the world of chronically
ill youngsters, the 7-year-old Feasterville boy is
a "frequent
flier" - a regular - whose cancer keeps him coming
back.
On a Thursday,
a Philly day for Woody, Jake lay curled in pain in bed,
alternately sleeping
and vomiting. Woody peeked in, but when Jake's father and
the nurses waved him off, he moved to the next room.
A moment later,
John Waltman rushed into the hall, tears in his eyes.
"Please,
can you come play for Jake?" he asked. "He
hollered out, 'Woody!' "
Woodrow Wilson
Wolfe Jr. is 46 and looks like an old folkie, bald andbearded,
with wire-rim glasses and sandals that he wears through the
winter.
He can play hundreds
of songs by heart. "Itsy Bitsy Spider" for
a toddler,Carole King's "You've
Got a Friend" for a lonely teenager, "The
Booger Song" for a
child who will laugh at nothing else.
"In a hospital
where there are so many people ready to poke you and
measure you and examine
you, he just comes in and gives," said Gail Hertz,
a pediatric resident
at the M.S. Hershey Medical Center, where Woody spends Wednesdays.
"The kids
go nuts for him. So do the nurses," said Lynn Dempsey,
a cardiac ICU nurse at Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia, his Friday stop. "I follow him
around."
In a simple studio
he built in his little white duplex by the river, Woody has
recorded five cassettes of songs. He has given away 30,000
copies tochildren and their
families, so his music can be there when he is not.
He charges nothing
for what he does. Hospitals give him small stipends -
$75 a day, tops -
and donations from churches and admirers keep him on
the road.
When he got a
haircut the other morning, his barber wouldn't take his
money.
"Put it in
your gas tank," he said.
Woody might travel
with just $10 in his wallet, yet he counts himself a
richman.
"People often
live their whole lives hoping to meet their heroes," he
said.
"I get to
meet mine every day."
*
Walking down a
corridor at Hershey Medical Center the other day, he
spotted one of them.
Jonathan Jagozinski,
a Luzerne County boy who has battled leukemia for two of
his four years, was playing in bed with Power Rangers and
Legos.
The boy looked
up.
"Woodyyyyyyyy!" he
yelled.
Soon he was singing
along to "Love Is." Bending his knees when
Woody sang "Love is
deeper than the oceans." Raising his arms as far
as they would go when Woody
sang "Love
is higher than a mountain." Flexing his muscles
when Woody sang "Love
is stronger than a freight train." Running to Woody
and hugging his hips
with all his might when the song ended.
"Through
every spinal tap that Jonathan has ever had," said
his mother,Jeanne, "he
had Woody's music on."
*
At age 10, Woody
Wolfe wanted to be a minister, but he grew up to be aparamedic,
assigned to helicopter medevac at Geisinger Medical Center
inDanville, his
hometown.
One afternoon
in 1981, he got a call from pediatric oncology. A 17-year-old cancer
patient, bored with lying in bed, wanted a ride. He took
the teen up in the chopper.
Woody mentioned
he played guitar, and had ever since the Beatles invaded America. "Maybe
I could come by and play," he offered.
Almost as soon
as he said it, Woody panicked. He was terrified at thethought
of playing to sick children, of even talking to them.
But he was stuck.
So he went. The children loved him.
At the time, Woody
was thinking about quitting his job and going intoseminary.
He had a long talk with a minister, a friend who knew aboutWoody's
debut in pediatrics.
"Did you
ever think your ministry is right where you're at?" the
pastor asked.
"It can't
be," Woody argued. "I crumble around critically
ill kids."
"That's the
point," the pastor replied. "You rely on the
greater strength toget through
it. That's when you can really get through to parents and
kids."
Woody went back
to the Geisinger children's ward - every few months atfirst,
then almost daily on his lunch break and after work.
"I'd see
these kids who looked pretty miserable and soon enough
they'resmiling," he
said. "And their parents, they were pretty wiped
out. But when they saw their
kids smiling, they became so rejuvenated. To me, that
was just a joy."
There Woody met "Little
Matt."
Seven years old,
he was not only a cancer patient but also a foster child.
Woody, his wife,
Debbie, and their two sons - one of whom also is named
Matt - visited the
boy so often that "he really became like ours," Woody
said.
Little Matt was
10 when he died.
"The last
thing he said to me," Woody said, "was, 'You'll
be OK when I'mgone. But I couldn't
have done it without you. I love you.' "
Woody paused. "I
think that's as close as I've come to really knowing
what these parents
feel."
A year later,
Woody left Geisinger, where he had become a technician.
Hecalled his new
one-man mission Heart to Hand Ministries. His
wife, a day-care worker, encouraged him - but kept her
distance from his
work.
She told him, "Fine,
if that's what you want to do." But after the pain
ofLittle Matt's
death, "I just can't get involved with every child."
Word of Woody's
music was spread by families, physicians and staff at
Geisinger. Soon
he was playing hospitals in Arizona, Florida, South
Carolina, and
camps for sick children as far away as Montana.
In the last year,
he has stayed closer to home, to be consistently available to
Pennsylvania children.
On Mondays, he
drives to Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, or occasionallyto
Baltimore.
On Tuesdays, he
plays Geisinger. Wednesdays, Hershey. Thursdays and Fridays, Philadelphia
- with a night at a Motel 6 in King of Prussia.
He always drives
the back roads, a tape recorder on the seat beside him.When
inspired or discouraged by the day's experience, he talks.
Coming over Blue
Mountain in Schuylkill County on a recent morning, hewatched
a hawk catch the wind and soar over his car.
Woody recorded: "The
beauty of this hawk comes from it simply being what it was
created to be, no more no less. My prayer today is, like
that hawk, I might be simply
what God created me to be.
"May I catch
the wind of His spirit and fly."
*
Connor Nestler,
8, lay alone in his bed at St. Christopher's, surrounded
byan armada of machines. When
Woody asked whether he wanted a song, Connor refused.
Woody doesn't
mind if children send him away. They have so little controlover
their lives, he figures, that if he can give them even the
power to say
no - well, that's
giving them something important.
He left a tape.
A week later,
he visited again.
Connor saw him
coming and sat up in bed. Woody pulled a chair alongside
and, in a voice as
easy as an old shoe, started out with "You've Got
a Friend in Me," from
the movie Toy Story.
Two
weeks later, Connor had improved enough to move from
intensive care to aregular
pediatric floor. When a nurse told him Woody was around,
Connor posted himself
by his door and, at the first sight of him, screamed "Wooodddyyy!"
The
boy had a request: "Can you do 'The Booger Song?' "
Always
aiming to please, Woody began singing, to the tune of "She'll
Be
Comin' Round the
Mountain":"There's
a booger in the sugar. No there snot."
Connor
laughed so hard and loud that parents and children from
other rooms gathered at the
door.
"That was
pretty disgusting, huh?" Woody asked at the end.
"Yeah," Connor
replied. "Can you sing it again?"
*
Slung over Woody's
shoulder with his guitar is the magic bag. When
he digs into it, just about anything could come out. For
families who live more than an hour from the hospital,
he reaches deep and fishes
out phone cards with 30 minutes of free long-distance
calling - a gift from a
church that supports him.
He might come
up with tapes and batteries, candies and McDonald's coupons, even
a picture of himself at age 19, long-haired, in front
of a VW bus.
"I know
what it's like to lose your hair," he tells youngsters
in oncology
as he shows the
photo. "I'm still waiting for mine to grow back."
He also carries
a legal pad with a rap song that he and a patient arewriting
(they call themselves "The Candy Wrappers").
Always with him
is a Bible. Woody doesn't sing religious songs or talk
about his faith, unless
a patient or family asks. The Bible is for himself, toread
after hard days.
Also tucked
in the magic bag is bereavement literature. Because many
of the children Woody
meets don't go home.
At
St. Christopher's recently, he spent an afternoon with
Erica Willits, a 4-year-old
with cancer.
While he sang
to Erica, said nurse Rhonda Gibson, "her heart rate
and blood pressure got better.
And I was, like, 'Woody can't leave!'"
Ninety minutes
after he did, the girl died.
In the last year,
Woody has sung at about 70 funerals and memorial services, and
he sang at Erica's, in Fishtown. He performed one of
his owncompositions, "Because
of You," and her family, having heard it so oftenbefore,
joined in:
"Because
of you, I've learned to live,
"Sharing
the joy that your life gives."
Which is why,
the next day, Woody Wolfe was on the road again to a
hospital, where sick children
waited to hear him sing.
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