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Judy Divers Memorial

"When I was facing the loss of my husband to cancer, there was nothing that could have prepared me for the excruciating pain of losing him. The physical pain he went through was ended and mine was just beginning. And it IS a physical pain that consumes your every being. The loss of the will to live, the loss of functioning in a day to day world when the wonder of why the world could go on when my whole world was taken from me. How could people look at me and not see that pain that crushed my chest, the gut wrenching sounds that came from somewhere deep inside me yet didn't even sound like me, the cries of my very soul struggling to stay alive?"

These are some of the words you can find in "GROWW - The Journey" by GROWW's founder, Judy Divers.

Bill died on September 5, 1992. They had hoped he might live a little longer so that they could celebrate their 30th wedding anniversary in December.

Like most who lose someone important, Judy spent many months in pain, in bewilderment, in disbelief. Her life was turned upside down and although she was blessed with four boys and grandchildren, life was not joyful.

Judy happened upon the Internet in 1994, on America on Line (AOL). She learned that some widowed people met in a private chat room once a week. She immediately saw how beneficial and comforting meeting with other widowed was and almost immediately found her new mission in life.

At first, the group numbered a little more than a dozen.

It was not too long before Judy decided that something as wonderful as this camaraderie needed to be shared, needed structure, needed direction. In a manner befitting a battle general, Judy began a personal campaign with AOL. She began a torrent of letters to AOL management to open up a section for the Widowed.

Finally AOL acquiesced and allowed Judy to begin an open chat room and a bereavement message board community. Judy took on the enormous task of training hosts and producing a weekly newsletter - and STILL taking "duty" slots as a Host in the newly formed Widows and Widowers chat room. Her stamina and determination were unmatched. Eighteen and twenty hour workdays were not uncommon. Judy thrived on her mission - caring and sharing.

The chat room flourished. People flocked to the room and were astonished to find conversation so totally different from other chat rooms. No cursing, no queries as to age or sex, parentheses indicating hugs crossed the page like real greetings and offers of support (((((((((((((((ROOM)))))))))))))) - chat rooms had taken on a new characteristic and purpose.

Judy took her mission further, too. Although visitors to the rooms were widowed, she could see the pain in the rest of the family too. While she fully understood the pain of losing her husband, she saw the need for the pain of others; for the kids who lost parents, parents who lost kids. And so Judy began other "communities", WWAngels for loss of child, for instance.

Judy also initiated a new experience - the Gathering. People from all over the country were communicating and bonding on line; people with the same pain; like experience. Along with her very first online contact, "HeadLimey" and others, Judy instigated the first gathering. More than 40 "roomies" met in Memphis Tennessee in 1995 and the ubiquitous parentheses became real hugs. Faces were assigned to screen names. And the electronic bonds formed took on the "reality" of flesh - a truly therapeutic experience.

Soon gatherings were planned all over the country.

In late 1996, the Internet was changing. AOL announced flat rate monthly pricing. New policies and procedures were put into place. The changes would not allow for the integrity and viability of the kind of community Judy was building. Although she had just been offered a contract as an official paid position of Community Team Leader for the group she had so professionally put together, Judy had to resign. She explained her resignation in an email to the community and was summarily stripped of her AOL privileges and Screen Name. It was a sad period of time and quite frustrating for a woman whose only intention was to help others.

Judy's core group of supporters continued to meet in AOL Private Chat Rooms with names like WWJudy and Grief Recovery.

All the while, Judy continued to chart her dream. During a gathering in Orlando, Florida, in February 1997, Judy held a meeting at her apartment with trusted friends and outlined her plan.

Suitably equipped with superior communications skills, the fastest backspace key in the world, an uncanny "sense" of what was going on, an unparalleled sense of humor, Judy's greatest characteristic however, was her compassion - a heart as big as the Internet itself.

The rest is history. GROWW was incorporated as a nonprofit organization in April 1997. The site was inaugurated in September and the chat rooms opened in January 1998.

Judy worked feverishly to lay the foundation and organization of GROWW with an incredible combination of determination and compassion

Tens of thousands of visitors have found the solace and comfort of GROWW, which was Judy's dream.

Anyone is welcome to take advantage of the benefits of GROWW, the caring, the sharing, the healing.

All because of a lady for whom the phrase must have had in mind … "ordinary people doing extraordinary things" ….. this was Judy Divers.

There will ALWAYS be a JudyDivers@GROWW.org

 

 

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GROWW, INC.© Judy Divers
11877 Douglas Rd - #102-PMB101 - Alpharetta GA 30005

501(c)(3) Non-Profit EIN: 59-3445877

We participate on GuideStar, the on-line standard for nonprofit accountability. Take a look at our listing.
GuideStar is the on-line standard for nonprofit accountability. Check out our listing.


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