Jennifer Green still plans to visit Minnesota this summer, to lay an inscribed rock along the shoreline of Faribault's Straight River. It was there where she almost died after jumping 25 feet from a bridge as a desperate 20-year-old.
But the rock will be the only heaviness Green carries. After going public with her hope to find the person who saved her life 25 years ago, not one, but two good Samaritans have stepped forward to say they were on the bridge together that day.
They prefer to remain anonymous.
"I'm just thrilled," said Green, now 45 and living in Chicago. "This is fantastic." She called her parents "right away, and they were very excited."
Green was featured in this column March 8. Diagnosed with bipolar depression in her teens, Green spent time in many hospitals and treatment centers. On Feb. 7, 1990, she sneaked out of her mental health facility in Faribault, sat on the bridge, then jumped.
She landed on an embankment near open water, shattering her wrist and breaking her back in three places. While those injuries might not have been fatal, she very likely would have died from hypothermia had no one discovered her.
I'd love to take credit for the joy in Green's voice during our follow-up phone call, but kudos all go to the Faribault Daily News, which first reported Green's quest to find her "angel" back in 2012.
After getting no traction for Green from that article, the newspaper re-reported her story this past Feb. 6, the eve of the 25th anniversary of her jump.