Sarah Williams
When she was three years old, growing up in Chicago, Sarah
Williams and her three sisters were taken from their mother, an addict
with drug-induced schizophrenia, and placed in foster care. "My foster
mom had eight foster kids," she says, "plus her own nine grandkids."
Pregnant at age 16, Sarah dropped out of high school to give birth to a
son, Lloyd. She married his father, Lloyd Williams Sr., a year later.
Their second child, a daughter, was born with a heart condition and
spent most of her brief five months of life in a hospital. The
experience inspired Williams to become a nurse. After the birth of two
more children, Gardenia and Jonathan, the Williams family moved to
Green Bay, Wisconsin, where Sarah resumed her education, earning a GED,
a CNA and an LPN in six years. In Phoenix, Arizona, she worked in a
cardiac unit and completed an associate degree in nursing. She and
Lloyd Sr., along with Gardenia and Jonathan, arrived in Springfield,
Oregon in 2018 for her new job in the intensive care unit at
PeaceHealth RiverBend. "I wanted to do more for the homeless and the
mental health community," she says. "A co-worker told me about Western
Governors University." Williams began an online WGU Bachelor of Science
in Nursing program in March of 2019. "I finished in eight months," she
notes, "and got two awards for academic excellence." She was invited to
give a commencement address at a regional WGU graduation ceremony in
Dallas, Texas, in February of this year. She is currently enrolled in
an online program from Walden University to become a mental health
nurse practitioner. In June, she transferred from the ICU to the
emergency department at RiverBend. "I was burned out from day-to-day
bedside nursing," she admits. "I'm in the process of writing a book
about my life and experiences. A friend suggested the name: A Rose from
Concrete. I'm looking for a writing coach or editor."
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 9 July 2020
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