August 18, 2007
New kidney means Deltona boy can just be a boyBy SARA KIESLER and NICOLE SERVICE
Staff Writers
DELTONA -- What once looked like a hospital room -- with a dialysis machine as a constant reminder of David Black's chronic kidney disease -- now looks like a 12-year-old's room filled with movie posters, awards and video games.
There's even a sign on the door that reads, "Do not enter unless you are an adult."
Underneath is a drawing of a little girl with a circle and a slash across her, followed by the words, "Find something else to do."
"That's for my sister," David says, grinning before he bounces down the hall with his friends Dale and Dylan Tanguilig and David's little tan dog, Penny, trailing behind them.
A lot has changed in the month since David underwent a kidney transplant in July. For starters, David has more energy.
"A lot more energy," says his mother, Bonnie Black.
"A lot, lot more," Dale adds, rolling his eyes.
Dale and David have been best friends since kindergarten. It was Dale's mom, Denise Tanguilig, who ended up being David's kidney donor. David was diagnosed with a nephritic syndrome, a chronic disease of the kidneys that slows a person's growth and causes them to suffer from high blood pressure, among other problems.
Denise says she decided to give a kidney after watching Dale become upset whenever David was in the hospital.
She insists she's no hero.
"Everybody is like 'you're a hero. You're an angel, this and that.' I really don't look at it that way," says the Deltona mother. "I just hope if my kids needed it, somebody would be there for them."
On Friday, both families gather at the Blacks' home in Deltona for fun. Inside David's room, the duo play checkers, while he teases Dale mercilessly.
"Who always loses?" David asks.
"Me," Dale replies, shaking his head.
"And who always wins?' David taunts.
"You," comes Dale's slightly amused reply.
He's right. David wins and he loses, so they take the competition to a video game, with the pain of the surgery and David's once-restrictive life almost forgotten.
All David talks about now are the things he can do and has been able to do since the surgery.
"I got to go to my friend's house and swim," he says.
Before, he couldn't go into the water or sleep over at someone else's house. He has been at two sleepovers since -- including the first one at Dale's house.
"He had to sleep on the floor," David says, pointing to Dale. "His mom made him give me the bed."
Like two typical boys, for about 30 minutes they taunt each other as they play, joke about friends and enemies at their school, Galaxy Middle, and talk about things they can do now that David is better.
Like visit the beach. Before surgery, David couldn't go to the beach because the sand is unsanitary for catheters.
"I am looking forward to that," David says.
Sitting in a rocking chair, Denise jokes about how David bounced back faster than she did, but says the pain from surgery isn't as bad as the doctors warned it could be.
"I am doing fine," she says. "I just can't move anything heavy."
Around her neck, she wears a necklace with a heart-shaped pendant. David gave it to her.
Inside is his picture engraved with the words, "Thanks for the special gift."
It equals the gift Denise gave him before they both went into surgery last month -- an ID bracelet etched with the name "Blackuilig" -- a symbol of his combined families.
sara.kiesler@news-jrnl.com
nicole.service@news-jrnl.com
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