‘A Special Miracle’: Stillwater man marks 50th birthday after series of health challenges

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Almost 50 years ago, just an hour after what doctors had expected to be a normal birth, newly born Eric Franzmeier underwent surgery to correct a diaphragmatic hernia.

With such a condition, abdominal organs can move into the chest cavity, often causing difficulty breathing for newborns and high morbidity and mortality. During that surgery, doctors inserted a artificial diaphragm.

“It wasn’t any more than just a few hours later that they realized that they had to — they’d squeezed him too tight when they sewed him up — so (then) they put in a great big plastic window so you could look right into his abdomen,” said Ed Franzmeier, Eric’s dad. Every 10 days or so, they reduced its size until finally removing it. Eric still has an artificial diaphragm.

Eric Franzmeier, center, with his parents Sue and Ed Franzmeier, as friends and family gather for an early celebration of Eric’s 50th birthday in Stillwater on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

With two other young children at home, Ed and Sue Franzmeier took turns visiting Eric at the hospital every day for nearly three months, except during one heavy snowfall. For the first several weeks, the parents received “not real good news,” Sue said, such as when they were told biopsies of Eric’s liver showed no living tissue.

“Of course, we expected, well, this is the end. This is what’s going to kill him. And then changes were made by the doctors … and things did get better,” Ed said, with Eric’s liver eventually recovering.

All these years later, Eric Franzmeier, of Stillwater, is weeks short of celebrating his 50th birthday on Oct. 2.

‘Offered some hope’

Looking back, Sue Franzmeier said, “you wonder how you made it through it all.”

After his birth, Eric had a series of surgeries, Ed Franzmeier said.

“He was in the hospital for a total of 111 days,” Ed said. “And I think it was right around the 90-day mark that we were offered some hope that he was going to survive. But even at Day 111, when we took him home, they told us, ‘Take him home and enjoy him while you can because we don’t know how long he’s going to make it.’”

The Franzmeiers returned to their Maplewood home with Eric, who was nearly 3 months old.

Eric’s brother Scott Franzmeier said he remembers the community support for the family and the prayers said over the loudspeaker every day for Eric at their Catholic grade school, which Scott said he believes is a big reason Eric pulled through.

Eric Franzmeier gets a hug from his cousin, Marida Stahovich, of San Diego. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

“Fortunately, we’re strong believers in Christ, and prayer carried us through. Prayer, good friends and people we worked with,” Ed said.

After Eric was home, the bank Ed worked at held a contest for a one week all-expenses-paid trip to a Florida resort, which he won. Ed and Sue, with Eric watched over by a nurse they knew, took the trip.

“I didn’t realize until we got back and we had a wonderful time that all four of the other guys wrote my name on the ticket, so that no matter which (one) was drawn, I was going to get that all-expenses-paid vacation,” Ed said.

‘Love Bus’

As Eric grew up, he spent time with his two older siblings and attended a school in Centerville. That’s when he first rode on a school bus called the “Love Bus,” known as such for its driver and aide who regularly decorated the vehicle, dressed up for holidays and made it a positive experience for the students.

A St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dispatch article from Oct. 1982, featuring a photo of Eric Franzmeier. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

“Even though it is a brief ride, the trip is clearly full of love and warmth — feelings that seem to be mandated by driver Geno Domini and his aide, Marcie Mlynarczyk,” a Pioneer Press article said in 1982. A picture of 7-year-old Eric with Domini ran in the paper at the time.

“And they took really good care of the kids. It was maybe six or seven kids that rode on the bus like that and picked them up at various locations and took them out to Centerville,” Ed said.

As Eric got older, he underwent several more surgeries related to the diaphragmatic hernia and dealt with seizures. But Eric said his health is good now.

Celebration ‘a special miracle’

On Aug. 23, the Franzmeiers celebrated Eric’s 50th birthday at his Stillwater home. Though his birthday is in October, the family wanted to take advantage of the nice weather. In March, Eric also will celebrate 30 years working at the Home Depot.

“We’ve said many times … that it was a miracle he survived 50 days,” Scott said. “The fact that we’re now celebrating 50 years is just absolutely amazing.”

Notes are left for Eric Franzmeier as friends and family gather for an early celebration of his 50th birthday in Stillwater on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

Just don’t remind Eric.

“My older brother says last week to me, he goes, ‘Eric, you know you’re going to turn 50?’ I go, ‘I know, can you not? Because you’re going to drive me crazy. I know,’” Eric said.

Guests at the party enjoyed NASCAR-themed cookies — Eric is a regular attendee of races and has a large collection of NASCAR shirts — and left notes with well-wishes. Pictures hung up outside showed Eric over the years, from when he was a day old to playing sports — he’s now retired from the Special Olympics — and attending NASCAR events.

A message hung up from his dad commemorated Eric’s start on “shaky ground,” but “what a Special Miracle we have in Eric.”

There’s only one living family member who can bring so many people together, Scott said.

‘He’s always smiling’

Also in attendance at the party was David Dereschuk, who works with Eric at the Home Depot. They met nearly 30 years ago at the store. Now, Eric is like a little brother, attending Dereschuk’s family gatherings or going to sports games with him. Dereschuk is “semi-retired,” he said, but makes sure he’s there when Eric is working.

Eric Franzmeier, right, talks with his longtime coworker David Deroschuk, left, as Eric’s dad, Ed, listens as friends and family gather for an early celebration of Eric’s 50th birthday in Stillwater. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

“If he wasn’t there, I’d be retired,” Dereschuk said. “He is why I go to work. He makes me feel better. He’s just, he’s always smiling. And we just have so much fun going back and forth, don’t we?”

“Yup,” Eric said.

Eric mingled with the guests, friends and family, from multiple states, who’d come to celebrate 50 years with him, ones that were once uncertain.

“I’m excited that all of them came,” Eric said.

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The smoking hot return of bathing culture

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“It’s completely changed our lives,” said Sabine Zetteler, a London communications agency director, who last year, with her partner, Alex Booker, an artist, built a kit sauna cabin by Polhus in their backyard in the London borough of Hackney.

Looking out across serene plantings, the cabin is a slice of city solitude that Zetteler now finds hard to imagine living without. She is not alone. Demand for home saunas is soaring in Britain and the United States as interest in the ancient ritual of sweat bathing deepens.

A bathing pond designed by the architect Richard Parr at a family home in Oxfordshire, England, in July 2025. Saunas and other water-based amenities are booming in societies that once turned their backs on them. (Andy Haslam/The New York Times)

Why the resurgence? Emma O’Kelly, the author of “Wild Sauna: The Best Outdoor Saunas in Britain” and “Sauna: The Power of Deep Heat,” has spent the past five years immersed in sauna culture as both observer and participant. She sees this return to what some have described as “analog living” as a powerful antidote to modern life.

“I think post-pandemic, there has been more of a focus on health and wellness, a sense of our own mortality — and also this narrative of self-care and preventative health, rather than just reaching for a prescription,” she said, speaking of the time period after January 2022, when the vaccine had been widely rolled out and most lockdowns lifted.

Like many others, O’Kelly thinks of a sauna, especially a “wild sauna” in an outdoor setting, as a healthy third space. “It’s cheap. It’s good for you,” she said. “It doesn’t involve drinking. Going to a wild sauna for an hour is cheaper than going to the pub.”

Jane Withers, the co-author of “Social Sauna: Bathing & Wellbeing” and the co-editor of the Substack newsletter Culture of Bathing, sees the revival as part of a broader cultural and physiological shift.

“There’s more understanding from neuroscience of what happens to the brain, and why we feel this deep relaxation — a moment of euphoria,” she said. “We spend so much of our time in the digital realm. We long for an experience that’s profoundly physical, embodied in the moment. It’s about the social dimension, physical dimension and perhaps a spiritual or transformative dimension — a way of changing states.”

The pool at Ridge House and Barn, a residence in New York in the Catskill Mountains, July 28, 2025. Saunas and other water-based amenities are booming in societies that once turned their backs on them. (Tony Cenicola/The New York Times)

The roots of sweat bathing stretch across centuries. In a blog post, the British Sauna Society noted Britain’s forgotten rituals, from Bronze Age sweat lodges to the elaborate Thermae the Romans built at Bath: “Before the Romans, before the Celts — even before written language — there was sweat.”

In some countries — Finland, Morocco and Turkey, to name a few — these traditions have been upheld. In Japan, the onsen — the hot spring used in bathing — remains central to a practice that is spiritual as well as physical. Earlier this year, Yuval Zohar published “Towards a Nude Architecture,” offering a visual meditation on onsen culture in Japan and its deep-rooted connections to landscape and the body.

Elsewhere, however, many other developed nations abandoned their bathing traditions during the 20th century. “In many countries, the decline came with the arrival of domestic plumbing,” Withers said. “People turned away from public bathhouses, and they became increasingly associated with poverty and necessity. Through the 20th century, many of the ones that survived were in poorer areas. At the same time, medical interest in water therapies diminished, and support for water cures was withdrawn. And of course, AIDS certainly didn’t help, with the closure of bathhouses in the U.S. and Europe.”

The reversal in attitude is written in new products and gathering places for bathing.

In an email, Marjo Karhu, marketing and content executive at Finnmark, an English sauna company, said that the company recently experienced an 80% year-on-year rise in online sales, with demand for two- to four-person saunas especially high in London and the south of England.

The company has also worked on larger-scale commercial projects like Arc, a Roman-inspired 65-person sauna in the heart of Canary Wharf in London. In New York, a bathing club called Lore is scheduled to open in September. In an email, its co-founder James O’Reilly billed the bathing club as an alternative to bars or boutique fitness studios.

According to Verified Market Reports, the North American sauna market as of June was $1.2 billion. A report by Technavio, a market research company, predicted that this market in the United States alone will have grown by $151.3 million from 2024 to 2029.

The recent rise in sauna cabin options amounts to a juggernaut. Companies including Kohler, Koto and Thermasol are rolling out new models for domestic settings — indoor, outdoor, flat-pack and off grid.

In the absence of a traditional frigid lake or ocean, bathers who want a cold plunge after a sauna or steam are installing natural swimming ponds in their backyards. Instagram is awash with DIY efforts like the pond, some 43 feet (13 meters) long, belonging to Jon and Caroline Edwards in Gloucestershire, England. Built from scratch with a mini digger and a lot of trial and error, it is now the heart of their backyard and their lives.

“Even my 90-year-old mum gets in and writes poems about it,” Caroline Edwards said.

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Once a rarely used lawn, the couple’s backyard is now teeming with frogs, dragonflies, newts and even deer. “There’s been a definite shift,” Jon Edwards said. “People are more aware of the power of nature — and more open to these kinds of projects.”

Elsewhere in England, Richard Parr, an architect, recently completed a family home in Oxfordshire with a lily pad-fringed pond. “Swimming ponds have become an almost obligatory add-on to country living,” he said. “They’re a great alternative to traditional spas with their artificial enclosures.” But, he warned, while they may appear low-tech, they demand careful attention that involves tending plants and removing debris.

“It’s a far cry from chucking in a few chemicals and waiting for a pool company to call by,” he said. “That level of participation and understanding adds a further dimension to the enjoyment and connection with the landscape.”

At Ridge House and Barn, a residence in the Catskill Mountains designed by the architectural firm Worrell Yeung, the journey to the pool is as important as the destination. “The audible sensation of hearing your feet on gravel takes you out of that typical resort context,” said the firm’s co-founder, Jejon Yeung.

This shift away from a slick resort ambience speaks to a broader rethinking of wellness, Yeung said. “The pandemic accelerated something. What used to be seen as luxury — cold plunges, saunas, outdoor showers — is now essential. These are no longer just amenities, but spaces for restoration and routine.”

— This article, which was first published in the New York Times, is part of that newspaper’s Design special section about new design solutions for healthy living.

 

Readers and writers: A reading list for a thrilling fall

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Where did the summer go? It’s time for a preview of fall/winter fiction and nonfiction by Minnesota authors and publishers. Thrillers/crime top the list followed by memoirs and history. (This is a clip-and-save list of books too new to be reviewed. Some information comes from the publishers.)

(Courtesy of Atria Books)
William Kent Krueger (Diane Krueger / Simon & Schuster)

Let’s start with William Kent Krueger”s “Apostle’s Cove” (Atria Books), 20th in Krueger’s bestselling Cork O’Connor series and one of the most anticipated novels of the season.

But Daniel didn’t move. “What if it all goes south, Cork? For Jenny or you or me or Waaboo? The Windigo’s out there. It’s hungry.” He turned and gave Cork a cold stare. “And God alone knows who it’s come for.” — from “Apostle’s Cove”

Aphrodite McGill was found kneeling by the bloody corpse of her daughter, Chastity, 25 years ago when Cork O’Connor, newly elected sheriff of Tamarack County, sent Axel Boshey to prison for his wife Chastity’s murder. Even after the conviction, Cork was never sure the Ojibwe man was guilty.

Now Cork, who’s glumly approaching his 60th birthday in northern Minnesota, gets a call from his son, Stephen, who’s working for the Innocence Project in the Twin Cities. He believes Boshey was unjustly incarcerated and urges his father to reopen the case.

The first half of the story takes place in the past when Cork is married to his first wife, Jo, a lawyer who’s pregnant with Stephen after giving birth to their two daughters. This is a way for Krueger to introduce this family to new readers and refresh the memories of devoted fans who know what is in store for them. Henry Meloux, for instance, an Ojibwe elder and healer and Cork’s mentor, is only in his 70s.

The second part takes place in the present, as Cork reluctantly begins a new investigation into Boshey’s incarceration, even though the man doesn’t want to be released from prison. Cork is helped by his daughter Jenny, an author who is looking for a good story. There isn’t much for Cork to go on and he isn’t getting help from those who were involved in the case. He is married to Rainy, full-blood Ojibwe and niece of Henry, who’s now around 100.

As the investigation continues, Cork is led to Aphrodite McGill, one of the most compelling characters in this long series. A woman who has a notorious reputation around the town of Aurora, she lives in an opulent home on Apostle’s Cove. She’s known for hosting wild parties for adults and her easy ways with men. After her daughter Charity is murdered, she will do anything to get control of her grandchildren, even though she’s not grandmother material.

As Cork goes deeper into the past and danger to his family increases, his grandson Waaboo (Little Rabbit), who sometimes has foresight, says the Ojibwe monster Windigo is on the prowl, hungry for humans.

As in his previous O’Connor books, Krueger pays respect to Ojibwe culture. And his depiction of sexy Aphrodite’s Halloween party at her Shangri-La estate provides the story’s biggest thrills. Kudos to him for smoothly integrating past and present while highlighting Cork’s love of his family. Every character is drawn precisely and it’s good to know that old Henry is still with us and Sam’s Place, Cork’s burger joint, is still going strong. And no reader is going to forget Aphrodite.

Krueger embarks on a multi-state reading tour this week. Here are his metro-area appearances:

Wednesday, 6 p.m., Whittier Recreation Center, 425 W. 25th St., Mpls., presented by Once Upon a Crime mystery bookstore;  Sept. 4, 7 p.m. Barnes & Noble, 2100 N. Snelling Ave., Roseville; Sept. 5, 10 a.m.-noon, Lake Country Booksellers, 4766 Washington Square, White Bear Lake; Sept. 8, 6 p.m., Next Chapter Booksellers, 38 S. Snelling Ave., St. Paul; 5 p.m. Sept. 10, Totally Criminal Cocktail Hour, Grand Banquet Ballroom, 301 Second St. S., Stillwater, presented by Valley Bookseller; 7 p.m. Sept. 15, SubText Books, 6 W. Fifth St., St. Paul; 2 p.m. Oct. 19, Big Hill Books, 405 Penn Ave. S., Mpls.

Here’s what else is in store for readers.

SEPTEMBER

Fiction

(Courtesy of Penguin Random House)

“Boy From the North Country”: by Sam Sussman (Penguin Press) — A debut novel from a Manhattan-based author about a son returning home to his dying mother to discover the truth of his origins and the secrets of a woman whose life and wisdom he is only beginning to understand, including her relationship with musician Bob Dylan and the narrator’s uncanny resemblance to Dylan. It is loosely tied to Sussman’s own uncertain celebrity paternity and connection to Minnesota native Bob Dylan, born in Minnesota’s north country. Based on the author’s memoir essay “The Silent Type: On (Possibly) Being Bob Dylan’s Son,” published in Harper’s magazine in 2021 and available online.

(Courtesy of Crooked Lane Books)

“The Deepest Cut”: by P.J. Tracy (Crooked Lane) — The cyber-sleuth Monkeewrench gang is back in their 11th thriller, which finds them threatened by two homicidal maniacs who escape prisons; one has an eight-person kill list that includes the Monkeewrenchers, who operate out of a St. Paul mansion. They work with Minneapolis homicide detectives Leo Magozzi, who is about to retire, and food-loving Gino Rolseth. These quirky characters work together (with lots of funny dialogue) to stop the plan of vengeance. Also, love is in the air in the Monkeewrench mansion. (5 p.m. Sept. 3, Totally Criminal Cocktail Hour, Lowell Inn, Stillwater, ticketed event presented by Valley Bookseller; 6:30 p.m. Sept. 9, Once Upon a Crime, 604 W. 26th St., Mpls.)

(Courtesy of Crooked Lane)

“Last One Seen”: by Rebecca Kanner (Crooked Lane) — A woman fights her own mind and memory to understand how she ended up in the passenger seat of a car speeding away from a murder scene in this dual-timeline psychological thriller. (Launch at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 23, Once Upon a Crime, 604 W. 26th St., Mpls.)

“Life, & Death & Giants”: by Ron Rindo (St. Martin’s Press) — No one in Lakota, Wis., knows what to make of Gabriel Fisher, who walks at 8 months old, communicates with animals and has prolific athletic abilities. When his brother dies, his Amish grandparents, disapproving of the attention he is getting, hide him away from the English world. When he’s nearly 8 feet tall, he’s discovered by a football coach, leading to events that transform Gabriel’s life and the lives of everyone he meets. The author teaches at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.

(Courtesy of McSweeney’s)

“Martha’s Daughter”: by David Haynes (McSweeney) — The first short-story collection from Haynes, who began his writing career in St. Paul, where he was an elementary school teacher. This is the first time his stories have been published in one volume. They range widely, from a rundown motel and its long-term guests to the title story about the first hours after a woman finds out her mother has died.

(Courtesy of Hyperion Teens)

“Seven for a Secret”: by Mary E. Roach (Hyperion) — In the town of Ava Island there was a group home for girls no one cared about. Over the course of six months, eight of them disappeared. But one did not. She wants to put what happened to her in the forest behind her, but six years later the men running the group home are turning up dead.

“Trigger Warning”: by Jacinda Townsend (Graywolf Press) — A woman who is no stranger to loss (a brother who died, a father murdered by the police, her house burned down) is in the midst of a divorce. She takes her child on a cross-country road trip to California where she’s confronted by her estranged sister and the past that haunts them. The author teaches at Brown University in Rhode Island.

(Courtesy of Atlantic Crime)

“The Whisper Place”: by Mindy Mejia (Atlantic Crime) — Third book in the bestselling Iowa Mysteries thriller series featuring Max Summerlin and Jonah Kendrick, an unlikely pair of private investigators who specialize in finding people who don’t want to be found. In this one they investigate the disappearance of a woman whose past holds a dangerous secret. (Launch at 7 p.m. Sept. 16, Wooden Hill Brewing, 7421 Bush Lake Road, Edina, presented by Once Upon a Crime.)

Nonfiction

“Her Place in the Woods: The Life of Helen Hoover”: by David Hakensen (University of Minnesota Press) — The first complete biography of Hoover, whose stories of life in the northern Minnesota wilderness were widely published during the 1950s through the 1970s. Leaving a corporate career in Chicago, Hoover moved to a small cabin without electricity or running water, finding a place for herself in what she described as the world of her time. (Launch at 7 p.m. Sept. 30, Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls.)

“Sugar Bush Babies: Stories of My Ojibwe Grandmother”: by Janis A. Fairbanks (University of Minnesota Press) — This memoir from a member of the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa revisits her life during Indian relocation from reservations to urban areas, from Ojibwe villages to white communities whose ideas about Indians come from Hollywood westerns, grounded in the wisdom she learned from her grandmother.

OCTOBER

Fiction

“The High Heaven”: by Joshua Wheeler (Graywolf Press) — In this multi-genre story, Izzy is orphaned on the first night of the first Apollo space mission and taken in by a struggling rancher trying to keep his mind from falling apart as NASA rocket tests encroach on his land. Izzy’s life moves from tragedy on the ranch through addiction, meeting eccentrics, and counseling people who have lost the ability to see the moon. The author teaches at Louisiana State University.

(Courtesy of the University of Minnesota Press)

“The House On Rondo”: by Debra J. Stone (University of Minnesota Press) — In this middle-grade fiction, Zenobia is spending the summer at her grandparents’ St. Paul home as eviction notices spread through the neighborhood when work on the Interstate 94 freeway begins. As Zenobia learns what this means for displaced residents, she discovers how her story intertwines with the history of her family going back to her great-grandmother and learns the consequences of taking a stand against the unseen government forces destroying a thriving Black community.

“The Mind Reels”: by Fredrik deBoer (Coffee House Press) — In this debut novel highlighting mental illness, deBoer, who has written about his struggle with bipolar disorder, writes of Alice losing her mind in her dorm room after drunken hook-ups and roommate fights. So begins a march of lithium, antidepressants and Klonopin, doctors and therapists as Alice descends deeper into chaos.

“Photograph”: by Brian Freeman (Blackstone Publishing) — Although bestselling Freeman has moved to Florida, we will always consider him a Minnesota author because his career began here. His new thriller is an emotional cold case of hidden identities.

“The Naming of Aki”: by Thomas Peacock (Minnesota Historical Society Press) — Retelling of a traditional Ojibwe story that celebrates what First Human and First Wolf see, taste, hear, smell and touch as they wander Aki, the Earth, to be the namer of things.

“Leaf Town Forever”: by Kathleen Rooney and Beth Rooney, illustrated by Betsy Bowen (University of Minnesota Press) — Picture book based on a true story about a Midwestern “town” created by children using leaves, sticks, and their imaginations.

NOVEMBER

(Courtesy of the University of Minnesota Press)

“Mysterious Tales of Old Minneapolis”: by Larry Millett (University of Minnesota Press) — Three tales of intrigue and murder in historic Minneapolis, introducing three unlikely but talented new detectives bringing the 19th-century city to life from the St. Paul author of 10 crime novels featuring Sherlock Holmes and sleuth Shad Rafferty.

(Courtesy of the University of Minnesota Press)

“What Doesn’t Kill Me Makes Me Weirder and Harder to Relate To”: by Mary Lucia (University of Minnesota Press) — The author, a media broadcast personality, writer, actor and voiceover artist, tells her personal story of what it’s like to be in the public spotlight when it might get you killed. As a rock DJ, Lucia dealt with many fans, but for one listener that connection became a dangerous obsession, leading to Lucia’s three-year nightmare. (7 p.m. Dec 9, Granada Theater, 3022 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls., presented by University of Minnesota Press and Magers & Quinn bookstore.)

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Looking for a mentor: Zoe

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Looking for a mentor: Zoe (Kids ‘n Kinship)

Kids ‘n Kinship provides friendships and positive role models to children and youth ages 5-16 who are in need of an additional supportive relationship with an adult. Here’s one of the youth waiting for a mentor:

First name: Zoe

Age: 12

Interests: Zoe loves the arts. She is an incredible artist! She loves being creative in her drawing, making videos, crafts, music, etc. She played a part in her middle school’s musical. She also enjoys camping and being in nature.

Personality/Characteristics: Zoe is very talkative, especially with those she trusts. She’s also a bit of an old soul, and is a deeply empathetic person, easily picking up on the feelings of others around her. Zoe has had a lot of challenges and big changes in her life recently that have led her to be very independent. She lives with her grandma, and grandma describes Zoe as resilient, outrageously funny, emotionally intelligent, and with a knack for language. Zoe’s first language was ASL (American Sign Language).

Goals/dreams: Zoe loves being involved in the arts!  She’d love a mentor who would listen to her, enjoy the arts, and who wants to be active – maybe go on a roller coaster with her, or take her on a hike. When asked what she’d wish for if she had 3 wishes, Zoe said 1: For Unlimited money (so she could give away a lot of it to people who need it) 2: For her grandma and her to live forever! And 3: For there to be peace in our world and for people to be able to be themselves.

For more information: Zoe is waiting for a mentor through Kids n’ Kinship in Dakota County. To learn more about this youth mentoring program and the 39+ youth waiting for a mentor, sign up for an Information Session, visit www.kidsnkinship.org or email programs@kidsnkinship.org. For more information about mentoring in the Twin Cities outside of Dakota County, contact MENTOR MN at mentor@mentormn.org or fill out a brief form at www.mentoring.org/take-action/become-a-mentor/#search.

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