4th annual Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive commences

Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive 2022


CINCINNATI (Nov. 12, 2022) –– The fourth annual Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive (JGMTD) officially commenced today in support of patients at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center (CCHMC) during the holiday season.

After raising a record $3,807 in 2021, the JGMTD will once again fundraise exclusively online in 2022 to benefit CCHMC’s Holiday Bundle campaign.

Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Holiday Bundle Campaign


Holiday bundles are age-specific packages gift-wrapped by CCHMC staff and directly distributed to child patients in December. The bundles are filled with books, toys, games and activities carefully selected to inspire kids of all ages to play and create.

Based on last year’s donation figure, the JGMTD has set an aggressive $4,000 fundraising goal for 2022. The JGMTD is calling on everyone to bring joy to sick kids this holiday season by contributing to this year’s campaign. While each holiday bundle costs $50 — gifts of any size make an impact.

Donations to the JGMTD can be made at bit.ly/JacksonGeiserToyDrive22. To ensure bundles are delivered to patients by Christmas, please place your donation by Dec. 18.

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About the Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive
The Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive (JGMTD) was established in 2019 by Jeff and Nikki Geiser in memory of their son Jackson, who passed away in 2018 after one month of age due to complications arising from chromosome disorder trisomy 13. Since JGMTD’s establishment, more than $6,400 in donations to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center’s (CCHMC) holiday toy campaigns have been raised. In 2019, the JGMTD collected and donated 100 gifts totaling $1,500 in value. When online donations were exclusively accepted by CCHMC in 2020 and 2021, the JGMTD raised $1,180 and $3,807, respectively. To donate to the 2022 JGMTD, visit bit.ly/JacksonGeiserToyDrive22.

2nd annual Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive underway

The second annual Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive is underway but looks slightly different from last year.

Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center is not accepting in-person donations this year due to COVID-19. So, this year, the Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive is raising money directly for the Cincy Children’s Holiday Bundles Campaign.

Holiday Bundles Campaign
Cincy Children’s created age-specific holiday bundles (valued at $50 each) that will be purchased, gift-wrapped, and distributed to patients during the holiday season. Any amount you can donate helps!

Here are the bundles:

  • Beaming Baby Bundle: For newborn to 2, includes a variety of baby items and toys
  • Toddler Trinkets and Playful Preschool Pack: For ages 2 to 5, includes a variety of age-appropriate learning toys and books
  • Spectacular School Age Sack: For ages 6 to 11, includes a variety of crafts, toys and activities
  • Terrific Teen and Young Adult Treasures: For ages 12 and up, includes a variety of teen-friendly activities and games
  • Soothing Sensory Specials: For children of all ages with sensory challenges, includes a variety of items that provide sensory stimulation through touch, sight and sound.

Thanks to you, last year’s inaugural Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive was a big success. We collected and donated 100 items valued at more than $1,500 in merchandise for Cincy Children’s.


With your help, let’s top that number this year! Every gift, no matter the amount, makes a difference.

Love,
Nikki & Jeff Geiser
Jackson’s mom and dad

Inaugural Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive yields 100 gifts for CCHMC

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The inaugural Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive was a big success, with 100 items valued at more than $1,500 in merchandise gifted to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.

Nikki and I delivered the donations to CCHMC on Friday, Dec. 20, 2019, just in time for Christmas.

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We’re grateful to everyone who donated! The response was more than we expected. It was heartwarming to witness so many people willing to spend their hard-earned money on gifts for some of the world’s most vulnerable kids. The fact that it was done in memory of our son Jackson made it even more special to us.

With the first Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive under our belts, we’ve learned ways to improve it for next year in hopes of making it bigger and better. Stay tuned and thanks again!

Note: 10 of the 100 items were Christmas gifts purchased on behalf of Jackson in 2018, when the idea of donating toys to CCHMC originated but before the Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive was created.

Announcing the inaugural Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive

Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive 01

Update 12-16-2019: We received confirmation that we can deliver the toy donations to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital on Friday, Dec. 20.

To honor the memory of our son Jackson Geiser (May 4, 2018-June 3, 2018), Nikki and I are putting together a toy drive benefiting Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.

The holidays can be an especially difficult time for children in the hospital. And since we will never have the opportunity to watch Jackson unwrap Christmas presents, we’ve decided to take the love we have for our firstborn child and channel it to other kids dealing with health problems during what is supposed to be the most wonderful time of the year.

We’re collecting toys that are specific to Jackson’s age (he would be 18 months old right now) and donating them to Cincinnati Children’s.

Cincinnati Children’s has specific guidelines on the toys that are accepted for donations. For example, all donations must be brand new, odor-free, in original packaging and purchased within the last 3-6 months. No stuffed animals and plush toys. Please do not gift wrap your items.

Amazon Gift Registry AddressTo make a donation, visit the Amazon Wish List for the Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive. Select “Gift Registry Address” as the shipping address when checking out (see screenshot to the right). The items on the Amazon Wish List come directly from Cincinnati Children’s list of approved toy donations.

If you want to donate something that’s not on the Amazon Wish List, please make sure it meets Cincinnati Children’s toy guidelines (https://www.cincinnatichildrens.org/giving/gifts/items/toys).

The deadline to make a donation to the Jackson Geiser Memorial Toy Drive is Thursday, Dec. 12, 2019 (items must be received by this date). I am going to arrange for dropping off the toys at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center on Friday, Dec. 13, 2019.

To make a donation, click here: http://bit.ly/JacksonGeiserToyDrive.

My first Father’s Day without my father

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Today is my first Father’s Day without my father.

This is a hard reality. My emotions are raw, ranging from depression to pride.

My father Bill Geiser passed away in January 2017 after a hard-fought battle with esophageal cancer.

Not a moment has passed without me thinking about him and missing him. Dad and I had a special bond. He was more than just my father; he was my best friend.

Like I said to the crowd who gathered to pay their respects during his eulogy, “I won the Dad Lottery.”

I could not have asked for a better mentor, supporter, teacher and friend. Dad was always there for me. From when I was a small child teaching me how to swing a baseball bat, to an adolescent when he showed me the proper way to parallel park, to adulthood when he advised on the best techniques to paint the interior walls of my first house, my Dad was always there for me.

We bonded over everything, from cars, politics, and mainly sports. As Cincinnati natives, we spent countless hours watching the Reds, Bengals (mostly to get a laugh) and Bearcats basketball and football.

As I look back on the impact Dad has had on my life, the biggest lesson I have learned from him is the importance of being a good, honest family man.

My dad was married to my mom Dianna for more than 36 years when he passed away. They were unequivocally committed to one another and to their family. They were inseparable. Watching their love grow stronger over the course of three decades has been an inspiration to me when it comes to my own marriage of almost one year to my wife Nichole.

Many people do not know this, but Nikki was gracious enough to move up our wedding date by one whole calendar year due to my father’s illness. Nikki and I got engaged in May 2016 and no more than three weeks later we found out that my dad had cancer. Once we officially got the diagnosis that it was stage four E.C., we decided to get married on July 15, 2016, instead of July 15, 2017, in order for my Dad to be there and share that experience with us. He actually delayed his first chemotherapy treatments until July 18 in order to be at his best for our wedding.

I will forever be grateful to Nikki for being so considerate and understanding, sacrificing a traditional, big wedding for a small, intimate gathering of parents, grandparents and siblings at a public park in Cincinnati, Ohio. It was a beautiful day, with my Dad serving as best man, groomsman and ring boy.

Not only was my Dad tremendous to his own family, he was a “saint” to his mom, my grandmother, Jean. For years, I witnessed my Dad spending much of his time with Jean, who by the Grace of God spent her remaining years living independently in a two-family house that she purchased, despite having a prosthetic leg. If my Dad didn’t stop by her house every day, it was certainly at least every other day. Sometimes it would be to do some work on her house; him being a master craftsman and carpenter for over 30 years helped. Other times, it would simply to stop by and spend some time laughing with her.

I was not the only person who noticed how dedicated Dad was to his mother. The property managers of the house adjacent to Jean’s saw it. In the months since Dad’s passing, my mother reached out the property managers to gauge their interest in purchasing Jean’s home. During this exchange, the property managers revealed to Mom that they referred to Dad as “St. Bill” for his treatment of Jean. This filled my mom’s heart with joy and pride. That’s the type of person Dad was.

One of the things that I miss the most about Dad is his terrific sense of humor. It was one of his gifts and allowed him to forge so many friendships throughout his lifetime. His quick wit and smart-ass remarks could put even the most uptight person into tears of laughter.

While I may not be able to spend another Father’s Day with Dad playing catch in the outfield of Great American Ball Park (which we did in 2015), sharing a few beers in his immaculately-kept backyard, or later on in the future watch him play with his grandchild(ren); I will always spend it remembering his best qualities and how lucky I was to have him as my Dad for 33 years.

My Dad has inspired me to dedicate my life to being a good and better man to my wife, Nikki, and our family.

If I turn out being even just half the man my father was, then I will have felt like I have achieved the impossible.