My Story
I once burned my hand, in a rather interesting way, trying to bake popcorn from the movie theater so it would remain crunchy. The pain was searing, as expected of a burn, but even as it healed the lesson stayed: harm often comes from good intentions paired with flawed systems, as is in public health.
A few months later, when Anushka, one of the founders of Dream Donations, came to Dallas to present at a wound care conference after winning an award no teenager had ever received. She resided with my family for three days, and in these three days, I was inspired beyond words. She had brought her poster to our house and briefly walked me through it. At the time, I was a sophomore in high school, and this poster was life-changing. It showed how excess wound care supplies could be redirected to homeless shelters and clinics that desperately need them. Anushka’s work with Dream Donations showed me that preventing suffering requires recognizing waste for its true value, and creating your own bridges where the medical systems have left gaps.
When I later traveled to San Antonio, I went with Anushka on a donation run, and I was truly struck by how many people suffer from untreated or poorly managed wounds, because of lack of supplies. One specific memory that stood out to me was the joy and gratefulness that the recipients displayed, an emotion that is engrained, forever, in my mind, because I realized that Dream Donations was helping those that even the public health systems ignored. Wound care, I realized, was prevention, access, and the cost of delay. Just like that buttered popcorn, small problems are often ignored until they burn someone.
Learning from Anushka’s conference experience and poster sparked my passion for wound care and occupational safety. With that, I was inspired to expand efforts in the Dallas Dream Donations, providing wound care supplies to underserved communities. What began as a response to a single poster will soon grow into drives and partnerships, and I hope to reach wide populations and communities in the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area.
-Ira Lalchandani
Please download flyer for the wound care clinics.




