By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior Correspondent
@StacyBrownMedia
It is human nature to want to say the right thing at the right time. To utter words that just might help heal.
I recall working at The Times-Tribune newspaper in Scranton, Pennsylvania, in the mid-2000s.
I had been assigned the City Hall beat, which meant covering the most dysfunctional city council ever assembled. Things were so bad that Times-Tribune columnist Chris Kelly had a name for the many angry citizens who attended council sessions each week. He dubbed them โThe Legion of Doom.โ
One of the key members of the council, a swing vote for then-Mayor Chris Doherty, was also a high school principal and, by all indications, an all-around great guy.
Rumor had it that he was having an affair with a secretary at the high school. That rumor was confirmed when the councilmanโs wife carried out her version of โDemolition Derbyโ at the school.

NNPA Senor Correspondent Stacy Brown, wife Shenay (third from left) and family.
An education reporter was originally assigned to write the story because of the wifeโs actions โ it was now so public that we couldnโt ignore it. The reporter called the councilmanโs wife and said something along these lines: โCan you tell us, how do you feel about your husbandโs affair?โ
The managing editor, assistant managing editor, and Chris Kelly were mortified by that line of questioning, and, since it had council implications, I was tabbed to handle the story.
Long story short, after that story, every time a family of a U.S. soldier got the devastating news that their loved one had lost his or her life in Iraq or Afghanistan, I was now the reporter to do the interview.
โYou know how to ask the right questions,โ the late John Murphy, then-assistant managing editor, told me. โYou seem to know what to say.โ
If Murphy were alive today, I would tell him that the coronavirus diagnosis that my wife Shenay and I received this week has rendered me with not a whole lot to say. I would say to him also that Iโm leaning on the encouragement of family, friends, and colleagues โ many of them understandably donโt know what to say. Some do.
Iโm grateful for the tons of texts, emails, videos, and social media posts of support.
Whether itโs one word, a like on Instagram, Twitter or Facebook, or a full paragraph of someone expressing their thoughts, my wife and I are grateful.
Norman Rich, the do-it-all editor and content manager for the National Newspaper Publishers Association and BlackPressUSA.com, suggested I share with our readers some of the encouraging messages Iโve received.
Most of the messages were โIโm praying for you,โ and many had the emoji for prayer or praying.
One of the best was a close friend who lives in Pennsylvania. He decided to leave a voice message that I retrieved from Facebook.
โStacy, Iโm sorry this has happened to you and Shenay. Anything โ and I do mean anything โ that I can do. You know you can count on me. Iโll even send an uber with some ointment!โ
The prayers and well wishes are great to have. Hereโs a sample of others:
- โI can send you the antigen.โ
- โTake Vitamin C and some Zinc.โ
- โBreathe in some steamed orange peels and sea salt.โ
- โYou need supplies while they last?โ
- โThis is crazy, and I hope you feel better.โ
- โWhat did the doctor say? Want me to talk to her?โ
- โI know a guy in the State Department, want me to call him for you?โ
- โPace yourself. Donโt be anxious.โ
- โTylenol, bro, Tylenol.โ
- โListen, use natural healing. Donโt let the doctors kill you.โ
- โThe strongest weapon is patience.โ
- โThe most effective tonic is laughter.โ
- โDonโt worry, have a lovely day.โ
- โStacy and Shenay, hang in there. Iโm praying for you. Letโs Go Mets.โ
- โYou will get through this.โ
- โIโll drive all the way there. Just say the word.โ
All of the words are encouraging. Iโm happy to say that all of my family, friends, colleagues and others have known exactly what to say to me, and at the right time. If youโre reading this on a website or on a social media post, feel free to leave a comment or to share wishes for someone you know that is also dealing with this virus one day at a time.
Because of you all, Iโm sure Shenay and I will beat this thing, and we will be in an even better position to help someone else.
The opinions on this page are those of the writers and not necessarily those of the AFRO.
Send letters to The Afro-American โข 1531 S. Edgewood St. Baltimore, MD 21227 or fax to 1-877-570-9297 or e-mail to editor@afro.com

