Chronically Ill Mom Forced To Choose Between Medicine Or Food Gets Help From Nonprofit

Chronically Ill Mom Forced To Choose Between Medicine Or Food Gets Help From Nonprofit

Dahlia said she wasn't the type of person who'd ask for help -- the hardworking mother of three had had a job since she was a teenager, after all.

But her outlook changed after she collapsed in October 2011. Diagnosed with lupus -- a chronic autoimmune disease that can cause pain and inflammation throughout the body -- Dahlia had nerve damage in her hands and feet, and had to use a wheelchair for days. She could no longer do the tasks that kept her family running, like cooking and cleaning, nor could she do simple things like brushing her teeth.

"Disaster -- that’s one way I could put it," the 47-year-old, who chose not to share her last name, told The Huffington Post. "I cried every day. In the hospital, in rehab, I’d see the doctor and just start crying, because even though I couldn’t get up and I couldn’t help myself, I found myself telling the doctor that I have the children at home to take care of, and I need to go home."

Dahlia went from full days of cleaning, cooking for her son and working evening shifts at a group home, to feeling utterly helpless.

"I was home -- can’t cook, can’t walk, can’t help myself, bills piling up," she said. "Everything was just falling apart."

With an empty kitchen and nowhere to turn, Dahlia said she called nonprofit God's Love We Deliver out of desperation. Now she's one of its roughly 5,000 clients living with a chronic or critical illness who receives meals delivered to their doorstep year-round, free-of-charge.

"I am so grateful, I can’t even express myself," Dahlia said. She receives 10 meals a week for herself, while her 10-year-old son receives 10 meals and five snacks a week. (Her other two children are adults and do not receive meals or benefits from the nonprofit.)

Founded in 1985, the organization was originally created to fight hunger among HIV/AIDS patients in New York City. Now the nonprofit serves people with about 200 different diagnoses, including Alzheimer's disease, all types of cancers, multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's disease.

And its impact is only "growing, growing, growing," Karen Pearl, president and CEO, told HuffPost. According to her, God's Love serves 76 percent more meals than it did seven years ago.

"It's not necessarily because there’s more need," she said. "But because we’re finding more people who need us."

According to research conducted by the Food Research and Action Center and Children’s Healthwatch, individuals with chronic diseases, like Dahlia, are often forced to make difficult decisions between purchasing medicine to treat their illnesses and buying food to eat. Before becoming a client at God's Love, Dahlia said she had to rely on the kindness of friends who'd drop off food -- after losing her job and health insurance, she didn't have enough money to adequately feed herself and buy "very expensive" medicine.

Those with chronic diseases are also less likely to be able to afford foods that support immune system health, which is why God's Love prepares all of its nutritionally balanced, low-sodium meals in its own kitchen.

But as its name suggests, the group does more than alleviate physical needs, according to Pearl -- especially this time of year.

"The holidays can be very, very lonely and isolating," she said. "And having people come and visit, and drop off not only delicious food but gifts and a lot of cheer, and just say, 'We’re thinking about you, and there are people out here who really care about you' -- it makes a difference to people."

On Christmas Eve, about 1,000 volunteers from the organization will serve more than 3,000 winter feasts to clients in the Greater New York City area -- a holiday tradition that has continued since the organization's inception. In festive boxes decorated by local school children, clients will have multi-course meals -- with foods like Cornish game hen stuffed with wild rice and New England corn chowder -- dropped off at their doorsteps. They'll also be provided with a "blizzard box" filled with nonperishable foods, in case harsh weather prevents deliverers from making a stop at their home in the coming months.

Dahlia, who currently doesn't have a job and receives disability and food stamps, said she's not sure where she and her son would be without God's Love We Deliver.

"To have someone come knock on my door and give me an already prepared meal has meant the whole world to me," she said.

To sponsor a winter feast holiday meal by God's Love We Deliver, click here. To learn more about the organization's volunteer opportunities on Christmas Eve, click here.

This story is part of series called 12 Days Of Giving. Huffington Post Impact, Religion and Parents have teamed up to feature stories from 12 families in need over 12 days between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Read more here.

Before You Go

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Ski season kicks into high gear during the holidays in this Colorado wonderland. December brings the festivities of Snowdaze—where the fresh powder is celebrated with live concerts every evening—and Holidaze, which includes the village’s tree lighting during the winter solstice and a New Year’s Eve torchlight parade down Golden Peak, followed by fireworks. Any time of year, readers love Vail’s liquid nourishments, ranking the town highly for its hot coffee (compare local favorites Yeti’s Grind and Loaded Joe’s) and equally warming cocktails. You might toast the New Year with a Rosemary Lemon Drop (rosemary-infused vodka with lemon juice and a sugar rim) at the icicle-decorated bar Frost, inside the recently renovated Sebastian Vail.

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Readers may be drawn to this former artists’ colony in Maine as a beach getaway, but the holiday season brings the perks of winter on the sand: lower prices and overall calm, with just enough festivity to keep things humming. Mid-December’s Christmas by the Sea Festival typically includes a bonfire on the beach and a soul-warming chowder fest. From Ogunquit, you can also easily reach two shopping areas for getting through your list: the Kittery Outlets and, an hour away, Freeport. For distinctive local shopping, browse the Harbor Candy Shop, where the gift boxes include a Vegan Sampler, featuring soy truffles, marzipan, and orange peel enrobed in dark chocolate.

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The banner event during the holidays in this island town started in the 1970s, because too many locals left to shop in Cape Cod. Today, during the annual Christmas Stroll—typically the first weekend in December—you can shop downtown amid dozens of seven-foot, decorated Christmas trees, and take part in wine tastings, ghost walks, and home tours. Pick up some gifts at Murray’s Toggery Shop (the mother ship for holiday-ready Nantucket Reds pants) and Jessica Hicks, the boutique of a local jewelry designer. For more tree-gazing, go to the Whaling Museum, which houses 80 trees decorated by local artists, merchants, and kids. Nantucket also scored well with readers for feeling both mellow and romantic.

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This Florida town lacks snowman-building material—it ranked highly in the survey for warm weather and beach getaways. But the snowbird-style winter wonderland still lured holiday revelers with its luxury stores, cool boutiques, and festive ambience. Third Street South is the headquarters for the official tree, evening “snow” showers during Thanksgiving week, and gorgeous window displays, like those at department store Marissa Collections in the Old Naples Historic District. Continue shopping along Fifth Avenue South, and check out whimsical clothing and gift shop Wind in the Willows, whose window won Best in Show at the 2013 local holiday decorating contest. Of course, the holidays are about more than retail; catch the Naples edition of the worldwide TUBA Christmas, a concert on Fifth Avenue South’s Sugden Plaza featuring brass tubas, euphoniums, and baritones.

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No. 7 Lewisburg, WV
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Grande dame hotel The Greenbrier is the epicenter of the holidays in the Lewisburg area. The 236-year-old resort trims the lobby with opulent decorations, holds ribbon-tying seminars in its Christmas Shop, and offers weekday discounts on treatments at its legendary mineral-springs spa. While you can hear the West Virginia Symphony play at Lewisburg’s own Carnegie Hall, the town may otherwise win the Silent Night award, getting high marks for peace and quiet. It also scored well for local bakeries like The Bakery, which serves pumpkin bagels.

Photo: Aaron Maxwell
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