Lions Eye Bank of Delaware Valley changed its name to AltruVision on July 1, 2023.

Mary Jackson Gets a Second Shot at Life

Mary Jackson Gets a Second Shot at Life

Mary Jackson Gets a Second Shot at Life

Mary Jackson didn’t just get new eyes – she got a whole new way of looking at life after a double cornea transplant 25 years ago cured her not only of blindness, but of suicidal depression.
Now in early 80s, she’s more active than she’s ever been and grateful for her second shot at life.

Going dark:
Mary was not yet 40 when she started having eye trouble in the 1970s. While working as a librarian at Thomas Jefferson High School in Richmond, she started experiencing double vision and problems reading as print looked blurry.
“I didn’t know the severity of what was happening,” she said. “They told me it was allergic conjunctivitis, which is just pink eye, plus atopic dermatitis. I didn’t know how serious it was.” The two conditions combined to leave Mary with untreatable failing vision and a huge problem for her career and lifestyle. “There I was as a librarian with a problem of this magnitude. I was also in the music ministry at my church so I had to be able to read the music and I was getting my master’s degree. And all of that while I’m going blind,” she said.

Even with rapidly failing vision, Mary earned a master’s degree from the University of Richmond in 15 months. But that was the high point. Four years later, in 1980, her vision had become too poor to continue working and she was forced to retire from her 22-year career as a librarian. “I was only 42 and I couldn’t work,” she said. “When school would start I’d really get depressed because I couldn’t go to work. I became suicidal and I’d have these pity parties every single day. No one was invited but my depression and my poor vision.”
Mary could still see a little – she could drive during the day as long as she knew the route well – but her vision continued to decline. She developed cataracts and her corneas became scarred. By the early 1990s, she could only drive to church and to Regency Mall – the only two places both close and familiar enough to navigate. “I became suicidal and I’d have these pity parties every single day. No one was invited but my depression and my poor vision.”

Risking it:
At church, Mary continued her work in the music ministry, memorizing the notes when she could no longer read them on the page. The pieces she couldn’t memorize, she rewrote “really really big” so she could see them.
But it was the depression, not her eyesight, that was the bigger problem. So when her doctor told her she could gamble on a cornea transplant, she decided to take a chance. “It was risky,” she said. “I could still see a little and the operation could have left me completely blind but I was going blind anyway. I figured blindness was going to be blindness so why not take a chance.”
The surgery was scheduled for Jan. 15, 1993 so Mary was completely unprepared when she arrived home in the evening to find a voice mail from the doctor saying a cornea was ready for her and the surgery had to be done the very next day. The chances of success were only 30 percent and Mary wasn’t ready but she went.

Signing up:
As she prepared for the surgery, she realized for the first time that she was being given someone else’s cornea – a gift of sight from a stranger who had signed an organ donation card. “I hadn’t been for or against being an organ donor. I didn’t know anything about it,” she said. But before she went in for surgery, she signed her own organ donor card. “When the doctor took the bandages from my eyes the next morning, it was like a new world.”

A new world:
There was only a 30 percent chance the transplant would work — but it worked. “When the doctor took the bandages from my eyes the next morning, it was like a new world,” she said. “The first thing I could see was the elation on his face because of the job he had done.”
Less than a year later, she had the same surgery again, this time on her right eye. Now entering the 25th year since her first new eye, Mary said she’s discovered a bigger world than the one she left. “I was taken out of the classroom but I was placed in a much wider arena than the classroom could ever hold,” she said.
She hit the road, traveling around the country and even to Australia with the American Baptist Women’s Ministries. She also began giving back to the donation community, talking to people who were candidates for cornea transplants and helping them through their fear.
“It became a passion of mine to talk to people who were candidates,” she said. “I talk to them on the phone or over email but when I was on the way to Australia I had to stop in Los Angeles and I got to have dinner with a woman I’d been communicating with over the phone.”

A medical miracle:
“I call transplantation a ‘medical miracle,’” Mary said. “I don’t have 20/20 vision but I don’t need to have 20/20 vision – I can read and I don’t take reading for granted. It’s a privilege.”
For a career librarian, being able to read again is everything. But it’s not all she’s doing, even as her 80th birthday approaches. “I’m on the board of the Old Dominion Eye Foundation and I’m the chair of Christian education at church and I teach Sunday school and I’m one of the editors of the church newsletter and I’m on several committees at church,” she said. She also found time to pose for calendars – one for Donate Life Virginia and one for the National Minority Organ Tissue Transplant Education Program. “I always say I’m a pin-up girl,” she said, laughing. She also says she’s been blessed with a second chance. “Suicide didn’t work because there was an opportunity waiting for me,” she said. “It always makes me think of the line in the hymn – twas blind but now I see.”

Related Stories

  • All
  • Donor Profiles
  • Donor Recipients
  • Stories of Cornea Transplant Recipients
  • Stories of Donors and their Families
  • Stories of Volunteers
Donor Profile: JoAnn
Donor Profiles

Donor Profile: JoAnn

JoAnn’s Legacy Lives On “My mom was truly one of a kind. She was the hardest working, most caring, selfless ...

Read More
Donor Profile: Allen
Donor Profiles

Donor Profile: Allen

Allen’s Legacy Lives On “Allen was passionate about photography,” recalls Leah. “He had such an artistic eye.” In 2007, Allen ...

Read More
David Rechtschaffen
Stories of Volunteers

David Rechtschaffen

p> Dave became a Lion in 1971; it will be 49 years in February. Despite relocating with his wife Sandy ...

Read More
Donor Profile: Don
Donor Profiles

Donor Profile: Don

Don’s Legacy Lives On My fiancé Don loved helping people. It was a part of him. He was the kind ...

Read More
Tyler's Story
Stories of Cornea Transplant Recipients

Tyler’s Story

Tyler, a sophomore in High School and the youngest of four siblings, has always been a gifted young man. Born ...

Read More
Svea Updates
Donor Recipients

Svea Updates

Svea Updates Born with Peters Anomaly, at just 14 weeks old baby Svea had to receive a corneal transplant in ...

Read More
Donor Profile: Tony
Donor Profiles

Donor Profile: Tony

Tony’s Legacy Lives On Tony restored the gift of sight for two individuals and donated his organs and tissue.   ...

Read More
Grateful Recipient Fundraises with Facebook
Donor Recipients

Grateful Recipient Fundraises with Facebook

Grateful Recipient Fundraises with Facebook Rubbing her eyes one morning because they felt dry, Anne immediately felt pain and discomfort. ...

Read More
Donor Profile: Jagdish
Donor Profiles

Donor Profile: Jagdish

Jagdish’s Legacy Lives On We are kicking off the New Year right with a very special Favorite Friend Friday highlighting ...

Read More
PDG David E. Jones
Stories of Volunteers

PDG David E. Jones

Dave became a Lion in 1971; it will be 49 years in February. Despite relocating with his wife Sandy post ...

Read More
Donor Profile: Rickey
Donor Profiles

Donor Profile: Rickey

 Rickey’s Legacy Lives On Remembering Rickey “If this could help another child to not have to go through what I ...

Read More
Donor Profile: Tiffany
Donor Profiles

Donor Profile: Tiffany

Read More
PCT Ann E. Reiver
Stories of Volunteers

PCT Ann E. Reiver

Inspired by Helen Keller’s appeal to help end preventable blindness, and witnessing firsthand through her husband, PID Ted Reiver, all ...

Read More
1st VDG Arthur Pecht
Stories of Volunteers

1st VDG Arthur Pecht

1st VDG Art Pecht has been a member of The Honey Brook Lions Club for the past 18 years, and ...

Read More
PDG Earl Groendyke
Stories of Volunteers

PDG Earl Groendyke

Earl has been a part of the Lion’s Club since 1983 and has held various important positions during his time ...

Read More
Jerilyn Giardina
Stories of Volunteers

Jerilyn Giardina

Jerilyn Giardina, a Shippensburg University alumna, has been with Lions Eye Bank of Delaware Valley for five years. Prior to ...

Read More
Holly Wright
Stories of Volunteers

Holly Wright

Holly Wright is the current administrative coordinator and has been working for LEBDV since October of 2017. Holly has many ...

Read More
Tamikya Whittle
Stories of Volunteers

Tamikya Whittle

Today’s Favorite Friend Friday is a woman who is no stranger to the world of donation and transplantation. Tamikya Whittle ...

Read More
Bill Ostander, CEBT
Stories of Volunteers

Bill Ostander, CEBT

The incredible sight-saving work done at Lion’s Eye Bank would not be possible without the dedication of the Recovery Technicians! ...

Read More
Lion Mark Green
Stories of Volunteers

Lion Mark Green

For Favorite Friend Friday this week we have an incredible Lion, Board Member, and volunteer to brag about, Lion Mark ...

Read More
Carly's Story
Donor Recipients

Carly’s Story

Carly’s Story Early in the morning on September 14th, 2015, Carly woke up with a headache and light sensitivity in ...

Read More
Michael's Story
Donor Recipients

Michael’s Story

Michael’s Story For our next Favorite Friend Friday, we would like to introduce you to Michael and Kathleen Cruz. We ...

Read More
Recipient Turned Eye Bank Staff
Donor Recipients

Recipient Turned Eye Bank Staff

Read More
Young Girl Defies the Odds
Donor Recipients

Young Girl Defies the Odds

Read More
Mary Jackson Gets a Second Shot at Life
Donor Recipients

Mary Jackson Gets a Second Shot at Life

Mary Jackson Gets a Second Shot at Life Mary Jackson didn’t just get new eyes – she got a whole ...

Read More
Kacey Follow Up, Over Six Years After Her Transplant
Donor Recipients

Kacey Follow Up, Over Six Years After Her Transplant

Kacey Follow Up, Over Six Years After Her Transplant Today’s Favorite Friend Friday highlights another one of our younger friends. ...

Read More
Daughter of a Lion Receives Sight-Saving Corneal Transplant
Donor Recipients

Daughter of a Lion Receives Sight-Saving Corneal Transplant

Read More
Long Time Eye Bank Volunteer Gets New Lease on Life
Donor Recipients

Long Time Eye Bank Volunteer Gets New Lease on Life

Long Time Eye Bank Volunteer Gets New Lease on Life We are so honored to introduce Vicki Piccotti, an active ...

Read More
Catching Up With Mina 6 Years Later
Donor Recipients

Catching Up With Mina 6 Years Later

Catching Up With Mina 6 Years Later In 2014 LEBDV’s forSight Newsletter featured adorable Mina, a young boy who was ...

Read More
Athletic Trainer Can Continue Doing What She Loves
Donor Recipients

Athletic Trainer Can Continue Doing What She Loves

Read More