Riverside hospitalI. The impact of unexpected careers 

   Over 48 years so many have asked, "How did you go fr0m criminal prosecutor to hospital CEO?" The answer is so absurd many disbelieve it. 

   In 1975, my life was a river flowing predictably. Bruce Trumm (aka "Pink Panther") earthquaked that river diverting it into the lives of thousands I would never have encountered and delivering me to hospitals with river names: Riverside Episcopal* and Riverside Methodist. 

   Bruce touches you who read this. Absent him, there is no Journal and absolutely NO chance I would have run three hospital systems, started giant OhioHealth, launched an international T.V. show seen by millions, put out best-selling books, produced four televised healthcare documentaries…

   No one would know of Radical Loving Care, The Mother Test or this writing. There would be no Riverside-based hospice in Columbus or "Thursday's Baby" in Nashville. Baptist Hospital would likely have gone bankrupt.

   II. "Pink Panther?"

   We expect family to shape us, not casual contacts. I knew Bruce vaguely as a fellow church board member.  The polio that crippled him caused him to shuffle and he would sometimes approach unheard. He loved his nickname: "Pink Panther." He ran the Toledo hospital named Riverside (no connection to Riverside Methodist.) I was a federal crimes prosecutor headed back to private practice.

   It took three tries for Bruce to convince me to accept his outlandish offer to help him run Riverside. I knew nothing about healthcare.  

   "Why me?" I asked Pink Panther. "I have zero training. You have hundreds of other choices."

    "After polio slowed me down, I studied people more carefully," he said. "I watched you in board meetings. You're a leader."

   It was the only reason he ever gave.

   Caregivers and leaders change so many lives. Did someone unexpected change yours?

-Erie Chapman

*Shockingly, Google produced NO pictures of Bruce, who died in 1984. After 119 years the hospital, pictured, closed in 2002 (reopened elsewhere as St. Ann's). The building where we worked was demolished in 2018.  

One response to “How “The Pink Panther” Changed YOUR Life – Days 202-206”

  1. Liz Wessel Avatar
    Liz Wessel

    What a great story and I am not surprised that Pink Panther saw an innate gift in you as a visionary leader, Erie. Who could have imagined the trail blazing that this would lead to! So, so many are grateful that you found your calling and that you took an adventurous leap into unknown territories with the ability to bring a fresh perspective, creativity and incredible energy combined with leadership skills. Throughout your career you have empowered caregivers, as your “number one priority of caring for caregivers who care for people.” Your approach of joining the frontlines in their work and working alongside them created a culture where caregivers could really shine their light and live their calling. Your “leading with love, not fear” leadership style supported caregivers to naturally pour out their gifts and talents for the betterment of those being served. Wow! What an incredible legacy of Radical Loving Care among your many other endeavors!!! Congratulations and thank you for dedicating so much of your life work to living out Radical loving care.

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