Reporter’s Notebook -- Young Chang
- Share via
I’ve had fun checking my voicemail over the last couple of weeks.
You’ve left messages saying you were inspired by someone you read
about. You’ve eagerly asked how you might help. You’ve made it clear, by
the checks, letters and other goodies you promptly sent, that you weren’t
kidding about wanting to help.
So first, thank you for reading.
Second, and more importantly, Amy Taylor thanks you too.
Since her story appeared in the Pilot earlier this month, I’ve
received more calls and e-mails than I could count from readers who were
affected by how she, a 27-year-old Vanguard University student, adopted
her three younger brothers and is raising them along with her one
biological son.
For those of you who missed the story or don’t remember, she bore the
Olympic torch when it was in Newport Beach on behalf of foster care and
the prevention of child abuse. She’s raising four boys on her own, going
to school, working part time and doing all this happily, thankful that
she kept her family together.
A painful family history involving one mother, five fathers, multiple
foster homes and countless social workers had tried to keep Amy, Adam,
Joey and Tony apart. Ten years ago, she was granted temporary custody of
the boys. Two years ago, shelegally adopted the three boys and now is a
parent to four, including her son, DJ.
Though the Pilot has not set up any sort of Amy Taylor fund, we’ve
received more than $2,000 in checks made payable to her. We’ve gotten
calls about how people could forward her Disneyland tickets, spa gift
certificates, even about whether Amy had a car.
Last week, someone dropped off a Nintendo 64 game system.
Amy gawked at this -- first at its extravagance, then at its multiple
controls.
“Oh there are two of these!” she said, immediately relieved that her
two youngest boys wouldn’t find a new reason to fight.
We were at lunch at Mimi’s Cafe. We each ate big entrees and even
indulged in fries, though we each figured we shouldn’t.
She read through all the letters and gasped at some of the pricier
checks.
I explained that people found her inspiring and wanted to help. She
said that most people with siblings would do the same.
After she figures out whose address she has and whose I need to find
for her, Amy will send thank-you letters to everyone she’s heard from.
Until then, she and Adam, Joey, Tony and DJ Taylor plan to use your
checks for necessities, for luxuries, for occasional dinners out, for
bill-paying and for emergencies.
I, in the meantime, will continue having fun lunches with Amy and
passing on the heartfelt letters, donations and messages I get. Some of
the recent ones have suggested Amy be nominated for the Daily Pilot’s
most influential 103 people issue that comes out every fall.
One woman who called Thursday said “everybody wants to back a winner.”
For safety reasons, Amy’s contact information isn’t being publicized,
but if you’d still like to get her a message, my number’s below.
* Young Chang writes features. She may be reached at (949) 574-4268 or
by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.