Cleofe Zerna greeted St. Michael-Albertville soccer coach Megan Johnson after practice Tuesday morning and pulled two shirts from a plastic Mayo Clinic bag to present as meaningful gifts.
The white shirt read, "Wife, coach, mom, kidney donor," and the blue shirt featured the statement, "No one fights alone."
Johnson received that gift of T-shirts because she donated one of her healthy kidneys to improve Zerna's quality of life.
"I was given a second life by a very gracious, selfless person," Zerna said.
Their co-authored tale of faith, sacrifice and gratitude started with soccer and Zerna's daughters. Rheana, one of three Zerna sisters to play for Johnson, scored a remarkable goal from midfield in a game last fall.
Hoping to see a video replay, Johnson asked Rheana how to get the footage from Julius Zerna, who always records his daughters' games. Rheana suggested Johnson send Cleofe a Facebook friend request because Cleofe had posted the video clip on her page.
Further scrolling of Zerna's page led to Johnson's discovery of "The Big Ask" posted on Feb. 15. Zerna struggled with IgA nephropathy, a chronic kidney disease that progresses over time and can lead to end-stage renal disease. Zerna's kidneys were functioning at only 11%, and she sought a kidney transplant from a living donor to avoid dialysis.
Johnson, also a mother of three, noticed a link at the bottom of Zerna's post for a Mayo Clinic health history questionnaire for prospective donors. She didn't know Zerna much beyond a typical coach/parent setting. Yet she felt a desire to help in her heart, emotional carryover from tragic news that had touched her program. Two 20-year-old St. Michael-Albertville alumni and former soccer players had died in a December car accident.