Bertrand also got the Washington Nationals' minor league affiliate Syracuse Chiefs, as well as the Syracuse men's basketball team into the Carry A Bead initiative. Through Carry A Bead, players wore a bead with them during practice, then sent the bead along with a hand-written note detailing what inspires and strengthens them to children in the hospital. In return, players received beads to keep as a reminder of those that are fighting for their lives at the hospital.
“The opportunities are endless to get teams involved,” she said. “It’s really just spreading awareness and getting word out there about the program. The Carry A Bead program is such a simple way for athletes to share their personal strength, positivity and encouragement with a child in the hospital.”
Last year, Bertrand and Le Moyne baseball player Jack Sheridan presented Carry A Bead to the entire athletic department. Sheridan, an Acute lymphoblastic leukemia survivor himself, had finished treatments and joined the Dolphins baseball team in the fall of 2017.
Sheridan had originally balked at joining the Beads of Courage program when he was diagnosed in 2014, but realized later on the impact that it could have on children battling diseases.
“It completely changes their day,” Sheridan said of the impact the beads can have on children. “A lot of them are going through tough things with treatment and going to the hospital all the time. Little things that make people feel like they’re thinking and caring about them makes all the difference in the world.”
After hearing from Sheridan and Bertrand in the fall, Sheehan was sold and made sure his team got involved. Le Moyne wore the beads in a fall practice.
“Our guys really enjoyed being part of the program,” Sheehan said. “It was a very spirited practice the day that we wore the beads to practice. They are fully aware of the impact that this could have on a child that’s going through a really tough time.”
Getting Merrimack involved wasn’t a difficult task, either. Bertrand’s son, Charlie, is a star attackman for the Warriors. He had been familiar with the Carry A Bead program since its inception, and had participated in it when he played at Baldwinsville High School.
As a member of Merrimack’s leadership council, Bertrand pitched the idea of participating in Carry A Bead before the Le Moyne game. Morgan and the captains pledged their full support, and Merrimack was in.
Bertrand and Morgan presented the Carry A Bead program to the full team before practice on Thursday. The players wore their beads at practice, as NCAA regulations prohibit them from wearing them this weekend.
“They were excited,” Morgan said of his team. “It’s something that puts things in perspective. Whether they’re banged up or they got a bad grade or whatever it is, and then Thursday they’re wearing a bead that in a month will be on the bracelet of a kid that just got out of surgery.”
Merrimack and Le Moyne will take the field at 1 p.m. on Saturday, looking to prove which team is the best in Division II. It’s a big game by any standards, but the teams know they’re doing something beyond lacrosse.
“It’s very impactful,” Susan Bertrand said of Carry A Bead. “You don’t always have to have a million dollars to make a difference in the world. Something as simple as this can really make an impact.”