Jean Homrighausen still remembers feeling 鈥渁we, shock, joy and humility鈥 when the Alliance for Children and Families honored her with its national 鈥淪pirit of the Alliance Award鈥 back in 2013. But the case manager/therapist at Cleveland鈥檚 Beech Brook Center felt equally humbled when a young client called her his 鈥淥utstanding Gangsta&苍产蝉辫;骋谤补苍诲尘辞迟丑别谤.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Both are signs of the deep respect and affection felt for the woman who dresses in bright colors that accessorize a brighter smile and is known for her gritty patience in working with the most challenging clients.
鈥淥ne of the gifts God鈥檚 given me,鈥 she said, 鈥渋s never to give up.鈥
鈥淢s. H,鈥 as she is known, likely inherited that trait from her father, the Rev. Tom B. Homrighausen, a 1938 Wittenberg graduate and a Lutheran pastor so devoted to the ministry that, as a child, Jean thought he lived at church.
On a visit to a woman suffering from equally severe arthritis and mental illness in a state hospital near Massillon, Ohio, she watched as her Daddy lifted a 鈥渢iny, frail, unattractive鈥 body on to his lap, 鈥渓ooked into her daunting eyes, and saw beyond the trauma and ugliness to a person deserving of dignity, care, respect and love.鈥
During a professional life treating young clients so disturbed and violent that many cannot control their bladders and bowels, much less their behavior, her father inspired her to 鈥渕ake an imprint鈥 on lives 鈥渞iddled with almost unspeakable tragedies, horrific abuse (and) sorrows.鈥
Enduring their sufferings with them is 鈥渒ind of like when you go through a tunnel,鈥 she explained. 鈥淚f you look either way you could crash, so I keep looking ahead.鈥
When accepting the 鈥淪pirit of the Alliance Award,鈥 Homrighausen showed a faith-based spirit of defiance as well.
鈥淚n our fast-paced, technologically entrenched, business-driven environment, where the treatment and care of those who are cast aside, wounded and forgotten is buried in paperwork, financial shrinkage and many other frustrating barriers,鈥 she said, 鈥淚 still stand Old School.鈥
Her award, like the honorary doctorate Wittenberg awarded her father in 1963, has its roots in his belief, which Homrighausen&苍产蝉辫;蝉迟颈濒濒&苍产蝉辫;辫谤辞蹿别蝉蝉别蝉:&苍产蝉辫;鈥淕辞诲 doesn鈥檛 give up on us -- and Christ went all the way to the cross.鈥
With unshakable faith, Ms. H believes she鈥檚 doing sacred work grounded in the same enduring love that sustains her and gives her clients hope, as it did the woman in her father鈥檚 arms.
鈥淭his relationship-building is the only way to transformation and healing,鈥 she said.
That鈥檚 Old School.