Chapter 3 – A Bold Request
Two months later
“Ray, look at this.” Morgan held up a pale yellow gadget, about the size of a quarter.
“What is that?”
“This,” Morgan paused for emphasis, “is a valve. I haven’t slept since we brought Isaac home.” Morgan continued more quickly and energetically, “My mind’s been racing, knowing there has to be a better solution, and after researching everything I could find on his condition, expecting there had to be an alternative, one night I woke with a start—and could see with perfect clarity exactly what he needed. In full color, three dimensions, I saw the very thing that would solve the problem, and I’ve spent the last four weeks ‘round the clock developing it. This is it.”
The doctor took the device and examined it from all sides. His mouth hung open slightly, as he considered the challenges that artificial valves had always been known to have, and with every turn of the object and every twist and bend of the fingers that held it, the realization washed over him that this inspired design avoided both the coagulation problems of the more durable mechanical devices, as well as the durability problems of their bioprosthetic counterparts.
The features were so advanced it seemed like science fiction. Dr Golward turned the valve over in his hands many times as he continued to examine the prosthetic device. He muttered thoughtfully, “This porous element might actually promote a strong matrix bond between the heart tissue and valve, maximizing implant stability…”
Morgan interrupted his thoughts. “The valves are made of a synthetic polymer that possesses the physical qualities of natural valves: elasticity for preventing deformation and adhesions, efficient opening and closing of valves, and compatibility with the natural healing process. So, no deformity, flow, clot or infection problems, essentially eliminating the need for multiple surgeries, heart failure, blood thinners…”
“Unbelievable, Morgan.” Dr. Golward examined it pensively one more time, then began to question, “But—”
Reading his thoughts, Morgan interrupted. “Ray, get this.” Morgan brought out a notepad with his midnight scribbles on it. Enthusiastically he pulled his chair closer to Dr. Golward and spun the pad around on the desk to face them both. “Look at this—with thousands of medical devices and a lab full of building blocks for everything my company makes, when I saw the vision for this, every solitary thing that needed to go into it was apparent as well.” Morgan chuckled, “I jotted it all down, wondering if it would still make sense in the morning.”
Dr. Golward pored over the notepad and eventually whispered, “This is a dream.” Looking up at Morgan, eyes wide, he continued, “Can this be for real?”
Morgan rattled on, “Thrombosis: not a problem. We take the DXio45 melding component, combine it with ROJ-62, overlay it onto the methyl methacrylate fiberflex and you have an ideal replication of the endothelium of the connecting heart chambers.”
Dr. Golward remained in a daze, and Morgan kept going. “With the new technology for fusion in cranioplasty, it seems the same process could bond this compound to the outer surface of the prosthesis, and voila! You’ve got built-in endocardium—the body won’t even know the valve is there.” After a moment he burst out a chuckle and excitedly pointed to one part of his diagram, “Do you see how this combination could even lay the foundation for potential self-repair?”
Dr. Golward sat back and closed his eyes, looking for a hole in Morgan’s theory. Finding none, he began with a sigh, “If this is truly what it seems to be, it’s revolutionary. The world will know about this, Morgan! It needs testing and mass development!” Leaning in he continued, “You’ve got to submit this to the medical journals—it’ll save thousands of lives every year! You always said you’d be saving lives in the trenches!”
Shaking his head, yet smiling, Morgan threw his head back and countered, “Oh sure, who would listen to me? I’m no medical doctor; I’m just a parent who is obsessed with seeing my son, the only child I have, grow up. No, Ray, the world isn’t ready for this. It’s for Isaac, and we don’t have time to wait for the medical community to accept it.”
Dr. Golward cautiously tempered his excitement. With his thoughts racing faster than he could speak, he blurted, “What are you saying? Wait—no. This can’t be for real. It’s—you—what about…” With his thoughts in a blur, he eventually reverted to a question that was at least possible to formulate. “Morgan, how in the world did you think of it?”
Morgan replied, “I couldn’t have designed it on my own if I tried, Ray. I’m not that smart. It’s bigger than me, and so I’ve got to go with it, follow where it’s leading.”
Thoughtfully Dr. Golward tried to process this incomprehensible event. He was witnessing the birth of a groundbreaking innovation, and had trouble digesting the significance of the moment. Slowly muttering out loud, he finally concluded, “You’re right, you’re not smart enough to come up with this on your own; somehow this passion of yours has become your portal to genius!”
“That’s about all I’ve got, Ray. I feel the passion in my veins. It keeps me awake at night. There’s nothing more I want than to know Isaac will give me grandchildren to carry on the family name. I want people—family—a hundred years from now to know and care that I lived.” By now, Morgan’s eyes were misty. One tear eventually fell, and looking embarrassed, he quickly wiped his face dry. “I need my son live a full life, without the constant threat of another operation, and I believe this will do it.” Morgan took a deep breath, and mustered the courage to say, “That’s why I need you to perform the surgery.”
Dr. Golward’s face fell. “You want me to do what?”
“I need you to give him this device. Put it in there. I can’t do it myself, or you know I would.”
“It’s too experimental—too infantile! Where’s the lab testing? Years of experimentation? This is your son, for crying out loud, not a laboratory rat! Have you gone mad?”
“You said it yourself, doc: this is genius; I didn’t come up with it on my own. I’ve been given a solution to save my son. Who am I to reject it?”
“How will you pay for this? The hospital, equipment, medications, the physicians? No insurance company would ever touch this.”
“I’ve already cashed in my entire portfolio. Much of the equipment can come from my own company, and—since on paper it can be considered product development and testing—I can utilize company funds, to an extent. I’m prepared to cover the facility, medications, and most of what your team would require, but I’m hoping you’ll do your part—as a favor.” Morgan searched the doctor’s face, which held back any sign of cooperation. “Let me try to simplify the idea. This proposition is not really that difficult, Ray. The procedure is routine, just with a different device—same contact points, same procedure. Only this time, no complications.”
“Do you have any idea how much red tape there is to go through? This sort of thing takes paperwork, releases, and legalities. I’m not sure Isaac has that kind of time, Morgan.”
“You can push it through, can’t you? I’m on my knees, Ray. I don’t know what else to do. He won’t always be a candidate. I’m afraid we’ll lose Isaac if we don’t do this.”
“You could lose Isaac if we do, Morgan.”
“Just tell me this. Is it possible? Can you use a device that has only been tested in the research and development lab at the plant? Can you get a team to do it?”
“It’s complicated. I can get the facility and a team, but this is a Class III device, so without approval from the Food and Drug Administration, we need an investigational device exemption—an IDE—and even with that we can’t do anything for at least 30 days, probably more.”
“But if you recommend it, and I consent—I’ll sign anything you need me to sign—then what does it matter to the FDA?”
Even though Dr. Golward could see the feasibility and genius of the invention, there was a part of him that had a hard time not seeing the gadget as home made, and the thought of being responsible for its performance to any degree terrified him. There was comfort to be had if they would just slow down long enough to allow the federal agency to either lend support or shut it down entirely according to their judgment. Apparently, Morgan didn’t care what the FDA thought, and Dr. Golward desperately wished that he did.
The doctor was certain that questioning the suitability of the gadget further would fall on deaf ears, so he tried another argument: “Well, here’s the thing, Morgan. What if it works? What if you’ve created something that would help others? Naturally I’d want this for your son, but you can’t expect me to approach this with the same indifference as if I were helping you fix your car. For another thing, if you’re asking me to do a favor like this, ethically, I’d need to take this on with the ultimate intention of letting it help humanity on the whole, not just Isaac. That requires an IDE to treat him as part of an approved clinical study.”
“So under those terms, how long before he’d get the surgery?”
“Honestly, I’m not sure he ever would. Before approving the study, they have to review all the documentation from prior studies—laboratory, animal, other human tests—a proposal for how we’ll run the study, consent documents. We have none of that. If by some miracle they approve the request anyway, then there’s a good chance they’ll impose some serious restrictions.”
“There’s got to be another way, Ray.” Morgan paused awkwardly and then continued, “You know what? Let’s not talk about this now. You’d probably like some time to digest it. Come to our house tonight. You’ve always relied on Rita to keep my head on straight. The three of us can talk about it at home.”
Dr. Golward was somewhat surprised by the suggestion because he knew Rita was too level headed for this, and he thought it odd for Morgan to suddenly shift from dogged assertion to being openly willing to bring her into the conversation. It actually sounded like a safe and perfect way to bring this madness to a peaceful conclusion. “Great. I’ll get back to work and then,” shaking Morgan’s hand he promised, “I’ll swing by on my way home from the clinic.”
~~~~~~
Follow Morgan who needs an unauthorized surgery for his son, Richard and Felicity who are at the end of their financial rope, and Ray who needs to find $4.5 million dollars in just a few days, as they each discover their portals to genius.
Built on the premise that the solution to every problem is just an idea away, Leslie Householder (award-winning best selling author of The Jackrabbit Factor: Why You Can) and Garrett B. Gunderson (New York Times best selling author of Killing Sacred Cows), bring you an experience you’ll never forget through this brilliant work true to its name: Portal to Genius.






Wow, that 2nd chapter had me sitting on the edge of my seat. Thank you for sharing.
This book is going to be absolutely wonderful. I can’t wait to read what happens next. What a great story already. Great job Leslie! Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Hi Leslie
Looks like you have another winner on your hands. I look forward to the next chapter….Rick
Wow this story has you on tenterhooks right from the start. Can’t wait for the next chapter.
It is already such a beautiful story! It is practically giving me goosebumps. I am excited for the next part! Thank you for putting this out there.
I’m totally hooked! This is already a fascinating and wonderful story. Keep up the good work Leslie!
Great story! Can’t wait for the rest!
Wonderful story. Can’t wait for the next chapter and the next and the next.
Wow, what a great start, how intriguing. This kind of excitement is usually somewhere near the middle of a book, not the beginning. Can’t wait for what is to follow.
Great start to the second book. Thank you and I look forward to the coming chapters.
John
You have a winner. I can’t wait for the next chapter.
Hmmm. One thing that lost me is all the medical terms. Lost my way with it all. For readers that hasn’t read the first book would had definitely given up on this point. I totally did not understand the point of adding all these terms. But the message was very good. I am big fan of the first one. Lets hope this is a masterpiece too.
I’m out of breath…This is so exciting. Thanks so much for sharing.
Great beginnings! “Portal to Genius” appears destined to be an immediate classic alongside Acres of Diamonds (Russel H. Cronwell) and The Greatest Salesman in the World series (Og Mandino). Congratulations and Thank You Leslie!
Great start to the story. I really like the build up, drawing readers in. I can see how you can bring in the lessons you want to teach with this story. Very well written.
I’m hooked and cannot wait to read the rest of it!!!
You couldn’t do a better job of pulling us into the next chapter if you had stopped mid sentence. Thanks again.
Wow!
What else could i say except: what a wonderful story!!!! Well done, Leslie. You are an amazing writer and an inspiration for all of us!!!!
Thank you!!!
Nikos!
Well, we have started. I am still wondering if I should have read the other book first.
It would help you feel a little more oriented perhaps. Remember, you can read the first one for free, usually in just one sitting. Get a copy at http://www.jackrabbitfactor.com. Otherwise, this prequel/sequel combo will include it in the middle.
The lead in for the title of the book and one of the principles for success, passion, was well crafted. “…somehow this passion of yours has become your portal to genius.” Also, I appreciate the way in which the challenges Morgan and Dr Golward will be facing were introduced. Ever wonder why health care is so costly? I have a medical backround and found the design concept of the valve intriguing. Is it plausible? Does it have to be?
Of course I believe it’s plausible… “whatever the mind of man can conceive and believe, it can achieve,” right? Anyway, for the story, it doesn’t matter. That’s the beauty of writing fiction. Probably every groundbreaking invention at one time was regarded as nothing more than fantasy.
It will be fun to look back in a hundred years and see how plausible the idea really was.
Ok, now I want to know what happens. I can already see this affecting my life. I’ve been looking for my passion for such a long time that I’m ready for something to “just come to me” that I can help the world with.
I want the rest of the story…NOW!
I now have read up to chapter 3. I can’t wait for chapter 4!
Also, my son is named Isaac, I was so excited to see the name in the story.
Nice begining. It shows the value and the power of passion and necessity to get the idea going!
Necessity to keep the focus on, the passion to drive the project to save the life of his son.
How it will overcome all the red tape?
So far it is nice indeed!
Keep the good work!
Attilio
Wow, this is great. And the statement, “somehow this passion of yours has become your portal to genius!”, stopped me dead in my tracks. If passion truly is the “portal to genius” as it seems in this story, then one could draw the conclusion that the “portal to genius” is available to all of us as we focus on what we are passionate about. Something to ponder, hmmm?
Anyway, I can’t wait to see the next chapter. Also, “fiberflex” is spelled “fibreflex”. However perhaps you know that and spelled it the way you did on purpose. Just thought I would mention it.
Keep up the great writing,
Lynn
Now the story is becoming really intriguing and suspenseful. I love the intensity and mystery in it. I like that is is realistic, too. I am really getting into this story. Great work!
More, More, more!
Wow!!…I read both chapters in one go…after the first I wasn’t too sure as the start was a little slow although it had all the ingredients of suspense and anticipation, but having read the second as well I can’t wait to read further. I previously enjoyed the JF and if that book is anything to go by, then this one will be great…well done and I hope the sales go through the roof when the book is released. Best regards
Definitely has me waiting for more…:)
With the new first chapter I’m more emotionally invested in morgan’s familiy. Absolutely fantastic!
Great stuff! I thought all the medical terms added authenticity, because, after all, that is exactly what these two men would do, wouldn’t they? – discuss the composition, manufacture and use of the device. I’m keen to know more!
Ahh, it stopped. I want to continue so bad. I’m hooked.
A technical note – about 1/3 of the way down the chapter, the sentence reads,
“I need my son live a full life, without the constant threat of another operation, and I believe this will do it.”
It looks like you need a “to” so that it reads, “I need my son to live a full life…”
I’m all in, ready to read the rest of the story.
I am buying the book, NOW! I can’t wait to see what happens. And also, I can’t wait to reconnect with Richard, Felicity, and Matthew.
Great Work!
Whew! Pretty moving!
thank you. thank you. thank you, leslie.
What’s to say? Words seem inadequate and difficult to conjure up since at this moment my heart is racing and I feel so sorry for all the other fantastic genius inspirations that have fallen foul of the laws of bureaucracy, red tape, ignorance and greed….May the consciousness be elevated to believe in miracles from the words inscribed in this book…..way to go Leslie.
By the way, I never feel inspired to leave comments on sites, this is my first time, so already on a personal level, things are changing…thank you…In gratitude……and it is now 01.42 am as i live across the pond….what a night….
I am inspired. Even those things that seem to be a setback, God uses for good, like Morgan not becoming a doctor. God had a better plan for his life. “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.”
Leslie, given that the concept is simply an idea, where did you find the idea for such a moving story? What inspired you to create such a compelling story? I truly would like to know as I feel you have been through a similar dilemma or know someone who has. please reply – I feel the key is simpler than one can imagine. Great work; you are exceptionally gifted. Thank you so much for sharing such a wonderfully inspiring ideal ….
The American philosophy of medicine is almost a sin: in China you pay the doctor when well and stop paying when sick, do you think the doctors there want to keep you well? 7000 herbs in Chinese medicine, no AMA and big pharmaceutical companies to obstruct progress. Do you know that there’s an underground movement to outlaw natural supplements so the machine can keep you paying them and getting sicker from the drastic side effects of medications, designed to treat the symptoms and not the cause so you take them for life, I’m controlling severe degenerative rheumatoid arthritis naturally and even though my doctors see it work they don’t subscribe to it as its not medical protocol. Your book opens a can of worms with me, thanx – DJ
I’m going to buy it. If for nothing else, it’s a great read.
Whew! Pretty moving!
I have to buy it now because I have to know what happens to Isaac! Thanks again Leslie!
Okay, I love it.
I knew this was coming and I’m sure with God’s help he gets the operation; ‘somehow’ they manage it, and he lives happily ever after.
The dad realizes this is why he had to quit medical school and that God has things happen for a reason (which i believe).
I love it.
Like the idea that Morgan’s disappointment over his original career has lead himself to a place where he may be able to help his son, in the first instance, and others if his invention gets off the ground. Feeling the frustration over medical protocol and that his idea can’t be used immediately but that is all part of the suspense I expect. Again, well written by Leslie. Flow and pace of read is how I like it.
thank you. thank you. thank you, leslie.
A wonderfully compelling introduction to what looks like a beautiful story of miracles and divine guidance. Thankyou for another inspiring read. Hope to see more of these stories from you and company, you have much to teach and so many who can learn.
great stuff…you are a genius!