John Napolitano Story

The Napolitanos of Providence, Rhode Island, are a very close
family. Parents Domenic and Nancy still reside in the Mount
Pleasant community they’ve called home the past 16 years, and
most of the kids have moved out and started their careers. Bianca,
the oldest at 33, attended Harvard and earned her doctorate at MIT.
She is currently a professor at Holy Cross and lives in Fitchburg,
Massachusetts. Domenic Jr., two years younger, went to school at
Western New England College in Springfield, attained his masters at
URI and works as an engineer for Raytheon in Newport. The youngest,
John, 21, has one foot out the door. He’s currently a student
at Keene State (N.H.) College, completing his degree in journalism
and competing on the Owls’ track team.
Last year was a difficult time for the extended Napolitano family.
Domenic Sr. lost a close military friend Joseph Mulvee who had
served as the best man at his wedding, and Nancy’s sister
Theresa lost her long battle with breast cancer.
The news didn’t get any better in the spring when Nancy was
diagnosed with Crohn’s disease, a chronic inflammatory bowel
disorder that causes scarring and thickening of the intestinal
walls and frequently leads to obstruction.
Although there are medications for it, there are none that cure it.
To make matters worse, Nancy was born with just one kidney and the
medication prescribed to her had an adverse affect on it.
“It was basically pick your poison,” said John.
“Either damage the kidney or let the Crohn’s disease
eventually take its toll.”
Nancy, 59, who had already endured multiple surgeries, decided to
opt for the medication, knowing full well it could have a
debilitating effect on her one functioning kidney.
When Nancy started on the medication in July, John, along with his
brother, father, and uncle, went into the hospital to see if he was
a match, just in case a donor kidney for Nancy was needed. While
his father and uncle matched, heath and age were a concern. That
left John and Domenic Jr. “My brother and I sat down and
talked about it,” John said. “We didn’t talk
about who should it be, but more about what should we do if she
needed a kidney.”
John used logic to try to sway his brother. “I told him, he
just had a son, and I feel I should step up and make the
donation,” he said.
The debate was softened a few months later when matches were done
again, and John’s kidney size was determined to be the
best.
“He wasn’t happy with the situation. As the older
brother, he felt he should have to do it,” John said.
“But when he heard I was the better match, he said,
‘Don’t do this because you have to; do this because you
want to.’”
And John wanted to. “This is my mother, and I love her very
dearly. So I felt it was something I wanted to do,” said
John.
With his siblings already out of the house, John said he was raised
like an only child. Following in their footsteps, he attended
Classical High School in Providence, a select school noted for its
college prep curriculum. “My brother and sister got in, so I
was a legacy, basically a shoe-in,” he said.
However, John could firmly stand behind his own credentials. A
strong student in the classroom, he also made a name for himself as
captain of the Classical High football and track and field teams. A
blocking fullback, John had just one touchdown to his name, but he
played on a pair of Division II Super Bowl championship teams.
Rhode Island is the only state east of the Mississippi that allows
its track athletes to throw both the hammer and the weight.
Although John wasn’t one of the Purple’s top
competitors, he received the Al Morro Scholarship, presented for
his dedication and sportsmanship.
It’s the same traits that have marked his throwing career at
Keene State.
“John’s level of dedication is remarkable,” said
Darcy Wilson, the Owls’ throwing coach. “He’s a
gentleman and a leader, and someone whom younger members of the
team look up to.”
Always looking to throw his weight around, John finished third at
the Little East meet last year and joined a short list of Owl
athletes who had qualified for the New England championships in the
event.
Originally planning to major in elementary education, John switched
course and decided to pursue a career in journalism. He has written
for the Equinox, the school’s student newspaper and has
worked as a student assistant in the Keene State sports information
office the past four years.
His booming voice can be heard echoing from the Owl athletic
complex during many KSC contests.
John has also given up his time during the holiday season to help
out at the KSC High School basketball tournament, a four-day,
60-hour hoop extravaganza that John says holds a special place in
his heart.
Two days following this year’s tournament, John’s heart
and kidney were with his mother.
The plan was to wait after graduation so John had a chance to
complete his Owl track career, but a failing kidney has a much
rapid timetable. After talking about options, including a donor
list with a wait of six to seven months, John said OK.
“There’s nothing else we can do. Let’s just do
it.”
At 4 a.m. on New Year’s Eve, John gave his mother a new lease
on life. The surgery, performed at Brown Hospital, went as planned.
Still feeling the aftereffects from surgery, John finally got to
see his mother around noon later in the day. Still groggy, but
doing well, John and his mother got assurances from the doctor that
things went well. The Napolitano clan, which John said included
everybody and their grandmother, gave out a unison sigh or
relief.
Words between son and mother were few, but emotional. “I
hadn’t seen a smile on her face like that in a long
time,” said John. It made it worth it. It really
did.”
Still taking biweekly dialysis treatments as a precaution, Nancy
recently returned home from the hospital. “I feel stronger
and better every day,” she said. “Even though I know I
won’t be able to live the same lifestyle, I am very grateful
that John has sacrificed so much for me. “I would like to
think that he has a lot of me in him, and that I would do the same
for him any day.”
John, arriving a little late back to school after the first
touch-and-go month after surgery, has resumed his classes and even
competed in a few meets. It takes a lot out of you when you lose 19
pounds and throw a 35-pound weight. The strong-willed senior did
muster enough strength to win the weight throw event at the
Wesleyan Invitational a few weeks ago and received LEC honors for
his performance.
John says the prognosis for his mother is very good, and she might
be able to return to her job at Women’s and Infants hospital
in about a year. “They say she should have a long, fulfilling
life,” he said.
“Family is the most important thing in my life,” said
John reflecting on the arduous, yet gratifying last few months.
“Without family and friends, we wouldn’t have been able
to get through it as smoothly as we did.”
Quick to deflect any sort of accolades for giving his mother the
gift of life, John says his gift will come this spring when his
mother comes up to Keene to see him walk across the stage and
receive his degree.












Men's Outdoor Track

