Positive Stories

She Earned Her Degree, Then Gave Her Dad a Second Chance at Life

She earned her degree, then gave her dad a second chance at life when she gave him her kidney.
Jul 11, 2025
My Crosswalk Follow topic Follow author
She Earned Her Degree, Then Gave Her Dad a Second Chance at Life

Not for herself, but for the man who once carried her on his shoulders through puddles and tucked her in with bear hugs and bedtime stories.

Her Father Was Battling Kidney Disease

Her father, Daniel, had been quietly battling kidney disease for four long years. Four years of dialysis. Four years tethered to a machine that reminded them all that time is never guaranteed.

“It was a matter of, you do dialysis or die,” Daniel said, describing life before the transplant. “I had a tube in my stomach. I was exhausted.”

Exhausted — but never alone. His daughters, Abby and Danielle, stepped into the sacred spaces of caregiving. Abby hooked him up each evening to the dialysis machine. Danielle watched, waited, learned, and then did something radical.

She Gave Her Dad a Kidney

She offered him her kidney.

No strings, no hesitations, no Plan B.

“I wasn’t going to let him tell me no,” Danielle said with love stitched into every syllable.

She Saved His Life

And really, what father could say no to the daughter who once reached for his hand on the sidewalk and now reached into her own body to save his life?

“It’s hard to put words to it,” Daniel said after the surgery. “It saved my life. I don’t have dialysis anymore. I’m not bound by it. It’s going to be a normal life.”

A normal life. What a miracle that phrase becomes after you’ve lived in the shadows of hospitals and uncertainty.

Her Decision Was an Act of Worship

Danielle didn’t do it for applause or headlines. She did it for Christmas mornings and coffee chats, for birthdays and backyard barbecues, for the simple joy of hearing her dad laugh. “It was a way to show my gratitude,” she said. “I was so happy to do it.”

Her bold and beautiful decision was more than an act of medicine. It was an act of worship — a living sacrifice that bore the very heartbeat of grace.

“Living donation is one of the most selfless gifts a person can give,” said Dr. Linda Chen, the transplant surgeon who walked Danielle and Daniel through the sacred exchange. “She gave their family the gift of time — more birthdays, holidays, and everyday moments together.”

She Gave Her Dad More Time

And that’s precisely what Danielle had in mind.

“I thought about every holiday — his birthday, Christmas — just getting more time with him,” she said.

More time.

Isn’t that what we’re all praying for in the end? Not more things. Not more achievements. Just more time with the people who mean everything.

They Are Savoring the Small

This Father’s Day, the Mobergs are not just exchanging cards. They’re exchanging glances of gratitude. They’re savoring the small — burnt toast, long hugs, corny dad jokes — because they’ve learned how fragile and fierce love can be when it walks through fire and comes out changed.

“We’ll be more appreciative of the time that we have together,” Danielle said, “and just the relationship that we have.”

She walked across the stage with a diploma in one hand. Weeks later, she walked into a hospital with her heart in the other.

Love Showed Up

Because sometimes the bravest kind of love isn’t loud.

It’s quiet.

Intentional.

And it shows up in the form of a daughter, one who was never going to let him go.

“Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” John 15:13

This content originally appeared on GodTube.com; used with permission.
Photo Credit: ©Facebook/
Memorial Healthcare System

Originally published July 11, 2025.

My Crosswalk Follow topic Follow author

SHARE