"My days were difficult," Sowatsky said. "I would get fatigued quickly, and I was still teaching full time, so my job was very taxing the last couple of months."
But Lynd, a 35-year-old native of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania who now lives in Millsboro, Delaware, read her story and jumped to action. Like Sowatsky, Lynd is a teacher who also shared the same blood type and also is a diehard Penguins and Jake Guentzel fan.
"I was a little kid in the early-90s, when they were winning [Stanley] Cups and it was easy to get attached," Lynd said. "You get attached to the franchise, watching games every other night for six or eight months depending on how the year goes."
Lynd believed all along he would be her donor but didn't find out for certain until August when her previously scheduled donor was disqualified by kidney stones.
"It just felt like the right thing to do," Lynd said. "As bad as she needed this kidney, on my end, I wanted to do this just as badly."
Lynd and Sowatsky will be forever linked through their organ. They shared Thanksgiving lunch together Thursday before Lynd and his wife returned home and marvel at the fast friendship they have formed in the past three months.
"I almost chalk it up to a sibling relationship," Sowatsky said. "We laugh. We cry. We feel each other's pain. It's remarkable the bond we've formed."
With her condition continuing to improve, Sowatsky can focus on good things, like her wedding to her Penguins-loving fiance Tyler Hart on May 4. Hart got Sowatsky into the Penguins, and she appreciates how the team is now integral to her positive prognosis.
"I like to trickle it down, and Jeff likes to trickle it down too. He says my transplant is because of Mario Lemieux, because if Lemieux hadn't saved the team then this wouldn't have happened," Sowatsky said. "I like to trickle it down on my end to Tyler's love for the Penguins, because my love for the Penguins through that, and I met Tyler through happenstance through my schooling, and I just believe that everything happens for a reason."