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another take on helping
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Has anyone seen the story on the Georgia family who was auctioning off all of their belongings to cover expenses for 2 of their childrens medical bills?

The items were valued at approximately 40K and when auctioned brought 20K from a couple who made one stipulation. The Peters family had to keep the items.

According to news reports this presented a quandry for the Peters family who wanted to sell the items to cover their expenses but not receive a handout.

But the Blair family who generously donated the 20k was insistent that the family keep their items.

Apparently after some awkwardness a solution was found and some of the items that were sold would be donated to other charities and the family would keep some of the items like their kids bunk beds.

Im feeling the warm and fuzzies for both of these families, the family who reads of anothers misfortunes and acts with grace and the family who has always earned its own and cared for its own put through circumstance into the position of benefitting from that grace in a way that is perhaps uncomfortable for them.

Anyway these kinds of things interest me from the human perspective.

Associated Press

EBay top bidder: Take our money, keep your stuff

Friday, January 30, 2009


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(01-30) 23:08 PST ATLANTA (AP) --

It started as a family joke: Facing snowballing medical expenses for their two young disabled children, Gregg and Brittiny Peters quipped they might need to sell everything they owned to stay solvent. As the bills tipped $10,000, however, the idea was no longer funny.

So on Thursday, the Gainesville, Ga., couple accepted a winning $20,000 eBay bid for all their belongings minus their house.

It came with one catch. The winning bidders, Donnia and Keith Blair of Texas, want the family to have the money, but keep their stuff.

Seems like the perfect happy ending, but the Peters say the whole idea was to start over, not take a handout.

The decision is out of their hands, the Blairs say.

"They've worked really hard to get those things and we're in a position to help them," Donnia Blair told The Associated Press Friday. "She can just act like they're my storage facility."

The Peters' lives and finances changed dramatically last April, when their 2-year-old son Noah was diagnosed with autism and with sensory and gastrointestinal disorders. Then in the summer, doctors diagnosed their 7-year-old daughter Ayla with juvenile arthritis. They also have a 1-year-old son, Eli.

Special treatment for the two older children costs about $2,000 a month and the Peters are carrying a $1,400 mortgage on their house in a suburban area about an hour north of Atlanta, said Brittiny Peters, a stay-at-home mom whose husband runs a tennis academy for middle and high school students.

They soon began keeping a list of what they could give away a jogging stroller here, a dining table there.

"Then it kind of hit us both, let's just sell it all," she said, explaining the couple figured "we will buy these things again some day."

They listed approximately $40,000 worth of items on the popular online auction, from DVDs and leather coats, to the king-sized bed where the family had Saturday morning pillow fights, according to a Web site set up by well-wishers trying to help the couple.

The Peters spent Friday morning trying to persuade the Fort Worth family to accept their belongings, which include a 2000 Chevrolet Tahoe. They even tried to retract the couple's bid.

"They are apparently not willing to take our stuff," Brittiny Peters said. "They're purchasing them to give them back to us."

The Peters said they will accept the money from the Blairs, but want to pass along the kindness to others. They are considering making donations, including giving away their SUV.

They are also trying to figure out what to do with money raised on the Web site, www.everythingweown.org. They didn't ask for the money and their efforts to return donations have upset some people, Brittiny Peters said.

The Peters are perfectly willing to stick by the bargain. But the Blairs who wouldn't give details on how they can afford to give away $20,000 won't budge.

"We've really been blessed the last few years and we saw an opportunity to help," Donnia Blair said.




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