Saturday, April 12, 12 p.m.-3 p.m. at Radiant Wellness Spa (Brookfield Professional Park, 33905 S.R. 54, Suite #101, Wesley Chapel). There will be free food and wine tasting, raffles and special pricing for booking services at the event. For more info, call (813) 715-2099 or visit Radiant-Wellness-Spa.com.
Kayla says itâs the only time she feels normal. âIt brings me a whole lot of joy,â she says.
The Zephyrhills mom, who grew up in Wesley Chapel, has end-stage renal disease (ESRD), a condition where the kidneys have permanently lost most of their ability to function. She says it stems from years of taking too much ibuprofen, trying to manage pain after surgery to correct severe scoliosis when she was 14.
âMy mom struggled with addiction, so I had been adopted by my grandmother,â Kayla says. âI was afraid to take opiate pills after surgery, so I used ibuprofen instead. But, it was an extreme level of pain and you just canât take ibuprofen for that.â
The irony, she says, is that she is still in pain, but now from the effects of ESRD.
âI literally killed myself not taking pain pills and thereâs nothing they can do,â she says. âIt just gets worse and worse.â And, Kayla says, it will continue to get worse.
That is, unless she gets a new kidney.
âI have been on dialysis for the last two years,â Kayla says, adding that those two years have been filled with pain and setbacks.
Unable to work, her days are filled with traveling to and from Plant City three days a week for dialysis. Sheâs away from home for about six hours on those days. The other days, she goes to other medical appointments, if she feels up to it.
In addition, Kayla has been legally blind since birth, which adds to her challenges.
Itâs all a lot to navigate. Even on the best days, dialysis leaves her tired and unable to do much of anything. âDialysis is very hard on your body,â she says. âIt can cause heart damage, gout and other health complications. Iâm exhausted and nauseous all the time.â
She adds that she had two blood transfusions last year, even having to leave her sonâs birthday party halfway through for an emergency visit to the hospital.
Sheâs hoping to receive a kidney as soon as possible. Kaylaâs been on the transplant list since February. If someone passes away whose kidney is a match for hers, she would be eligible to receive it. But even better, she says, would be a living donor.
âTransplanted kidneys last an average of five to 10 years from a deceased person,â she says, âbut from a living donor, the average is 20 years.â
Kayla is working with the AdventHealth Transplant Institute to find a living kidney donor. She needs a kidney from someone with type O blood, and says it doesnât matter if it is O positive or O negative.
If she finds a willing donor with type O blood, they would go to AHLivingDonor.comto begin a screening process to see if the donorâs kidney is a potential match for Kayla.
âI have four children,â Kayla says. âI worry all the time. Am I going to leave them before theyâre ready? Am I going to get to see them graduate, grow up, fall in love, play with my grandkids? Can I even grow old and get married to the man I love? On dialysis, thatâs all up in the air.â
Kayla Long needs a kidney to continue to be around for her sons Jack, Ari, Keegan & Chris (nephew Leeland is 4th from left).Â
Kayla first met Chris on the bus to Weightman Middle School when they werenât even teenagers yet. âHe used to ride his bike to my house and hang out with my brother and sister,â she says. âWeâve been together since we were 22.â
She says being sick, blind and in chronic pain makes it so the couple canât do a lot of things that typical couples in their 30s with young kids want to do, but Chris has stuck by her side through all of the trials.
Thatâs when they take the kids to Commandoughâs in Zephyrhills, where they order pizza, the kids get up and sing and dance, and Kayla will take the stage.
Itâs only then that she says she feels true joy.
âEverybodyâs happy,â she says. âIâm happy. My kids are happy. I donât feel self-conscious. I just get up there and sing, and then all of a sudden, I feel normal for a while.â
Kayla says she is working on setting up a trust, with legal fees sponsored by Commandoughâs, to help provide for her family so Chris can care for her full-time for a few months after her transplant, a necessary part of her recovery.
To follow Kaylaâs journey, search for âKidMe in Your Prayers: Kaylaâs Transplant Journeyâ on Facebook. To start the process to learn more about donating a kidney to Kayla or someone else like her who is on the waiting list for a transplant, go to AHLivingDonor.com.
We continue to promote the ribbon-cutting events hosted by members of the North Tampa Bay Chamber (NTBC). A recent one we attended was for Peak Brain & Body (2404 Creel Ln, #101, Wesley Chapel; below photo) on Mar. 11.Â
Peak is the office of Family Nurse Practitioner and Chiropractic Physician Dr. Spencer Zimmerman, who moved with his family to our area from Idaho and is the only dual-licensed nurse practitioner/chiropractor using advanced neurological diagnostics, functional neurology, functional medicine and peptide therapy in Florida.
Our photographer Charmaine George also was on hand for the ribbon cutting at Jachimek Chiropractic & Wellness, located at 5111Â Ehrlich Rd., Ste. 128, Tampa (Top Photo) on Mar. 20. Chiropractic physician Juliet Marvenko, or Dr. J, cut that Chamber ribbon.Â
For more information, call (813) 960-2225 or visit JachimekChiro.com.Â
And then, on Mar. 26, Tiny Tots Playtown (photo right & below), located at 24412 S.R. 54 in Lutz (in the Eagle Plaza, behind Brunchies), cut an NTBC ribbon. Owner Lauren Pratt introduced Chamber members to her super-cute, shoe-free (donât forget to bring your socks) little indoor play center for young kids â which surely will be a welcome respite from Floridaâs summer heat and rains, which are fast approaching.Â
Tiny Tots can host kids parties and has gift cards and unlimited play opportunities available.
(L.-r.) Jace Haitz, Megan & Kristy Darragh and Toni Osborn of Florida Executive Realty in Tampa Palms. (Photos on these pages provided by Kristy Darragh)Â
If youâve been seeing real estate headlines that make you think the sky is falling, long-time local RealtorÂź Kristy Darragh of Florida Executive Realty in Tampa Palms says to brush it off â itâs just click bait.
âI monitor trends weekly, monthly and quarterly, as well as the long history and economics of housing,â she says, âand the local housing market lately has been a bit wobbly, but is still basically a flat line.â
She says that plateau is a good thing (not a sign of death), meaning the local market continues to be steady and predictable for those who are looking to buy or sell.
With almost four decades in the industry and a near obsession with crunching the numbers, Kristy has a deep understanding of the local market and promises her clients expert advice for how to sell their homes for the highest price or buy a home at the best value.
A staple in the New Tampa and Wesley Chapel real estate market since 1994, Kristy has recently updated her brand to include her daughter Megan, so youâll now see ads for Kristy & Megan â rather than just Kristy â not only in the Neighborhood News, but also on billboards and in direct mail.
Megan began working with her mom in 2020, after previously serving as the office manager for the Westchase branch of Florida Executive Realty. Now, theyâve solidified their partnership with the teamâs name change.
Kristy and Megan say they are able to serve their clients with client service umatched in the local market, thanks to assistants Jace Haitz and Toni Osborn, both of whom have worked with Kristy for many years.
âThereâs no way I could provide the excellence and volume of work I do without them,â says Kristy of her support staff. âThey are what makes it possible for Megan and I to offer this level of service.â
Kristy uses all of those years of experience to translate whatâs happening in the market into useful information for her clients.
For example, she says she tells her clients to always look at the current inventory to understand the basic fundamental principle of supply and demand. Historically, she says, the 33647 zip code has had around 300 active listings in a normal market. âRight now, weâre at about 170 active listings,â Kristy says. âWe came from a peak during the pandemic where we only had 18 listings in the entire zip code.â
At the time, prices were sky high due to demand. She says that while the market has recovered to be more balanced, thereâs still plenty of room for more inventory.
âPrices on a lot of homes have come down, but they needed to, because people were pricing their homes the way they were in 2020 and 2021,â she says, âand that was when the market was unbalanced and somewhat frenetic.â
Meanwhile, In Wesley Chapel…
Wesley Chapel has its own trends and metrics, and Kristy explains that all of the new construction in the area means resale prices are somewhat suppressed. That means Wesley Chapel sellers need to have realistic expectations as to what they can sell their homes for, and that they should always work with an expert who can help price the home appropriately to sell quickly or meet the sellerâs goals.Â
âThis is a normal cycle,â Kristy says. âYou canât use prices for new construction for your asking price on a resale home because builders offer incentives, such as money back toward closing costs, bonuses and interest rate buydowns.â
She says these incentives can be valued at up to $100,000, so resale homes have to take that into account to be able to price to sell.
âIâve got 38 years of knowledge, including 30 years here in the New Tampa and Wesley Chapel area,â Kristy explains. âI see trends so clearly and have lived through so many real estate cycles that I can tell you the market is not falling and prices are not dropping. We are in a healthy plateau, and that is what you want so the market can normalize.â
She says there also are annual trends that always happen, and that weâre just about ready for an influx of seasonal buyers in April, May, June and July.
âThis is when the most buyers are in the market, so prices definitely go up,â Kristy says. On the other hand, over the year-end holidays and the first quarter of each year is when resale prices are the lowest, giving buyers the best opportunity to purchase a home at a lesser cost.
âThis happens every year,â Kristy says.
Kristy and Megan are each licensed as both a real estate agent and as a Broker. Kristy joined Florida Executive Realty in 1994 and became partners with Doug Loyd in the Tampa Palms location of Florida Executive Realty way back in 2003. Loyd owns five other offices of Florida Executive Realty located in and around the Tampa Bay area.
Kristy and Megan have many satisfied clients, including Nancy and Mike Yetter, who recently sold their home in Ashington Estates in Tampa Palms to move to The Sanctuary (also in Tampa Palms), where Kristy and Megan helped them find the perfect smaller-sized home to fit their empty nest. But, the Yettersâ new home still provides enough room that they donât feel cramped.
âIt was a lot of fun,â Nancy says. âWe felt very lucky to work with both of them.â
While most people wouldnât call the stressful sale or purchase of a home âfun,â Nancy says Kristy and Megan made the process stress-free and actually enjoyable.
Nancy also says that she and her husband first met Kristy when she was the sellerâs real estate agent when they bought their Ashington Estates home in 2018, after experiencing what Nancy described as a âhorrificâ experience selling the home they were moving from on Anna Maria Island.
âWe were so impressed with her back then,â Nancy says. âWe said if we ever moved, we wanted to ask her to be our agent.â
Because the couple travels often, they trusted Kristy and Megan to handle the entire process, including showings and repairs that needed to be made to the home.
âTo have absolutely no hiccups was great,â says Nancy. âWe were able to close on both homes the same day. It was perfect the way [Kristy] organized that.â
Nancy says that both Kristy and Megan understood their needs and didnât waste their time showing them homes that werenât what they wanted.
âIâve recommended Kristy and her team to three people already,â Nancy says. âSheâs very professional, sheâll work for the best deal possible, and she doesnât let anything fall through the cracks. She knows the market and thatâs so important.â
The Tampa Palms office of Florida Executive Realty is located at 15802 Amberly Dr. For more information about Kristy and Megan Darragh, visit RealEstateNewTampa.com or call (813) 931-6700.
Homes For Our Troops (HFOT)  is hosting a kickoff event for the building of a specially adapted home in Wesley Chapel for Marine Sgt. Christopher L.M. Lawrence this Saturday, April 5, at 10 a.m. (with check-in at 9:30 a.m.). The event is being held at Pinecrest Academy (33347 State Rd 54, Wesley Chapel, FL 33543) and the public is welcome to attend.Â
Sgt Lawrence was injured while serving in Iraq and this Community Kickoff event signifies the start of the build process and will introduce Sgt Lawrence to the community. On August 17, 2007, Sergeant Lawrence was serving as a fire team leader with the 3rd Assault Amphibian Battalion, 1st Marine Division, in Al Anbar, Iraq, when he was injured on a foot patrol by an improvised explosive device (IED) blast, resulting in severe damage to his legs and left arm, internal injuries, tinnitus, and traumatic brain injury (TBI).
The home being built for Sgt Lawrence will feature more than 40 major special adaptations such as widened doorways for wheelchair access, a roll-in shower, and kitchen amenities that include pull-down shelving and lowered countertops. The home will also alleviate the mobility and safety issues associated with a traditional home, including navigating a wheelchair through narrow hallways or over thresholds, or reaching for cabinets that are too high.
HFOT has built more than 400 homes since the organizationâs inception in 2004. Homes For Our Troops relies on contributions from donors, supporters, and corporate partners for the building of each Veteranâs home. Community members may hold fundraisers or make donations. To find out more on how to get involved or make a donation visit www.hfotusa.org. Learn more about Marine Sgt Christopher L.M. Lawrence at https://www.hfotusa.org/lawrence