Tracy by Andy (circa 1994)   Nine references to Tracy Wimberly appear in the best-selling Radical Loving Care. Taken together, they do not begin to describe her magical effect on others.

   "I don't exactly understand her," one colleague shared, "but she certainly gets it." 

   His comment makes sense. The "it" Tracy has (like all whose presence brings peace) is mysterious. 

   On our Riverside & OhioHealth dream team in the '80s & '90s (& later at Nashville Baptist) Tracy was the most different. Working as a public health nurse when I first noticed her she seemed tender-hearted; unusual for a top leader in a giant health system. But, she is also tough-minded. 

   Great team members never fit the same mold. Tracy's uniqueness was fascinating. 

   The first time I noticed her she was soft-voicing a speech at an Episcopal gathering in Toledo. The calming impact was noticeable. When she spoke again at an open meeting of Toledo's Junior League her passion for service shined.

   She deflected my first invitation to help lead a different Riverside Hospital (Toledo) but finally accepted.

  The first hospital-based hospice in Ohio arose at Riverside Methodist (Columbus) shortly after I became President in 1983. It would not be there today except for two people. Community leader Stuart Lazarus proposed the idea & Tracy Wimberly shepherded a place of dying into life. 

   As with Jeff Kaplan, whose name should be on the McConnell Heart Hospital, Tracy Wimberly should be honored as co-founder of Kobacker House & hospice. Good leaders pick good leaders. Tracy picked Judith Lebanowski as the new director. (She did the same at Nashville Baptist picking Kim Fielden to lead nursing.)

   Converting medical centers into healing cultures requires a Tracy. Tragically, her kind are rare & rarely noticed.

   Hospice was groundbreaking. But Tracy's importance involved culture change.

   The women's movement in medicine was nascent in 1984. Tracy, partnering with women in medicine & the community, founded the Elizabeth Blackwell Center (after America's first female physician.) Too humble to "take charge" she engaged an inclusive collaborative leadership model. 

   The caregiving environment at OhioHealth's flagship, Riverside Methodist, was okay in 1983. To take care of the people who take care of people we needed great.

   Tracy improved quality of work life paralleling Mark Evan's leadership in human resources, Nick Baird's physician leadership, my working beside first line workers regularly &, later, Nancy Schlichting's leadership as COO. 

   Through Tracy, pocket-parks popped up on campus, rest-nooks emerged inside the massive buildings & elevators were renamed "Apple" & "Violet" bearing poems. Why? To help humanize the environment

   We called our caregivers, including doctors, "Partners," not employees.  When partners thought up new ideas, we thought up ways to honor them. A new drinking station became "Charlie's Fountain" honoring a caregiver's suggestion.

   Leaders like Tracy Wimberly awaken magic. Hospitals that frighten patients & are "just workplaces" to some become healing communities marshaling love to change the quality of life for hundreds of thousands.

  Alchemically, Tracy's initiatives helped hospitals becomes hospitable; centers where you trusted that your loved ones would receive healing care because leadership cared for caregivers. 

  Tracy's office door carried one word: "Peace." For that one must embody loving presence. 

   "She listens with her whole self & rarely speaks," I wrote her dear husband, Andy, "When she does, you feel that for which we yearn: that you have been heard. She affirms, whether she agrees or not."

   This is why I describe Tracy as the most caring, competent & compassionate leader I know. 

   She is a sister & the dearest of friends.

-Erie Chapman

Photo of Tracy – Andy Workum 

http://www.eriechapmanfoundation.com 

7 responses to “Tracy Wimberly, R.N. – A Portrait of Peace Through Presence”

  1. andy workum Avatar
    andy workum

    Thank you Erie. As you may suspect Tracy said she will read it “later”. And read Dr. Baird’s carefully.

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  2. Joe Forquer Avatar
    Joe Forquer

    What a wonderful tribute to a remarkable lady. You are so right…she created such a warm and caring environment which was so needed at the time. She was an innovator and a great leader. I so much appreciate your stories and mentioning Jeff, Mark, Nick and Nancy…..all wonderful leaders that help create such a wonderful and caring place to work! Thank you Erie

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  3. Judy Herendeen Avatar
    Judy Herendeen

    How lucky was I as a young leader to rub shoulders with all these talented people. Their touch and influence created enduring lessons of compassion, creativity, caring. Lessons for that made so many of us want to be better leaders and better people. Thanks Erie for bringing home so many of these precious memories.

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  4. erie chapman Avatar
    erie chapman

    Thank YOU, Judy, for being such a big and beautiful part of our time together. Tracy, Jeff, Marian, Mark, Nick and others including YOU, all created the culture that made RMH great and enabled the creation of OhioHealth. As you know, I would love to have stayed since, in my view, we simply at the end of the beginning when Jack Chester shoved us out. Strange that he has that memorial in the lobby:-)

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  5. erie chapman Avatar
    erie chapman

    And YOU are part of this list, Joe. Your energy, positive spirit & overall skills contributed to so much to that great culture and you continue to be a great gift to all that know you! Thank you!!

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  6. erie chapman Avatar
    erie chapman

    Well, of course. I hope you have or will read it outloud to her whether she wants to hear it again or not. Equally important is to be sure as many grandkids as possible read it. That seems important to me and hope we can count on you to make it happen:-)

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  7. Liz Wessel Avatar
    Liz Wessel

    Erie, another incredibly beautiful tribute to a remarkable person. What a leagacy of love and caring!

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