Single man adopted ill child then raises an Olympic champion

Jerry Windle never thought he could be a dad. He was a single gay man in the nineties, which was a totally different time, but a magazine story about a man who adopted a child from Cambodia would change all that.

Jerry felt hope as he read the story between the father and his son.

So he called the listed number of an adoption service, informing them that he found the number in an article. He went on to ask if a single person could adopt a child.

The service said yes.

A few months later, Jerry had in his arms a sick 18-month-old boy in an orphanage in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The baby named Jordan had scabies and intestinal parasites. The poor child was malnourished and suffered from severe infections.

Jerry adopted the boy, nursing him back to good health. That once sickly boy went on to represent the country in the Tokyo Olympics.

Jordan Windle was placed in a Cambodian orphanage when he was just a year old after his birth parents died. He represented the United States on the U.S. Olympic Diving Team after he took second at the Olympic trials.

Jordan says his dad is the loudest out of everyone in the audience during his competitions. COVID restrictions then meant Jerry couldn’t go to Tokyo but he still supported his son.

“I wish he was there, but that doesn’t really change what I’m going there to do: To have fun, show off a little bit, and put on a show for everyone. That’s going to be my intention and I’m hopefully going to make him proud,” Jordan said.

It was at summer camp when a 7-year-old Jordan impressed a man named Tim O’Brien. O’Brien told Jerry that Jordanreminded him of the legendary diver, Greg Louganis. A swimmer his own father coached.

Jordan started diving at 7. He won his first national junior national championship at 9.

Jordan never forgets his roots. He grew up in the US but he still represented Cambodia in his heart during the Olympics. He even had the Cambodian flag tattooed on his arm.

Jerry, together with family and friends, had a watch party at home in full support of his son.

“It’s disappointing but at the same time this is Jordan’s journey and this is the pinnacle of it, and I want him to enjoy this experience as best he can … That’s what I’ve always wanted for him,” Jerry said.

Jordan went on to say that he would think of his father during the competition.

“I tell everyone, when they ask me why I dive, I dive purely for my dad and how much he loves watching me,” the athlete said.

“Without him making all the sacrifices that he has, and his love and support the whole time we’ve been together, I really wouldn’t be where I am today. I have him to thank for everything, all my accomplishments. It’s been an amazing journey with him, and we’re still rolling.”

Meet Jerry and Jordan below!
Please SHARE this with your friends and family.

Related Posts

Senate Confronts Presidential War Powers in a Pivotal Vote After Maduro’s Ouster, Testing Constitutional Limits, Congressional Authority, and America’s Democratic Identity at a Moment of Global Uncertainty and Intensifying Executive Power

The dramatic U.S. military operation that resulted in the capture of Nicolás Maduro has unleashed a fierce constitutional debate in Washington that may have deeper implications at…

Melania Trump Breaks Silence with New Official White House Statement

Melania Trump’s New Official Portrait Sparks Debate Melania Trump’s new official White House portrait, released January 28, 2025, has drawn wide public interest and debate. Captured in…

Red Mayor’s First Shockwave

Zohran Mamdani didn’t inherit power; he arrived with urgency sharpened into purpose. He stood in front of battered Brooklyn walk-ups where tenants had endured years of eviction…

Woman killed by ICE agent in Minneapolis identified — what we know about her

Minneapolis is reeling after a fatal shooting involving a federal ICE agent that has sparked outrage across the country. The woman killed during the incident has been…

Trump dubbed a ‘disgrace to humanity’ after latest comment about ICE shooting victim Renee Nicole Good

The shooting of Renee Nicole Good has sent shockwaves across the United States. And new statements from President Trump have only intensified the situation. A fatal shooting…

The laughs never showed up — and that’s exactly why it landed so hard. Jimmy Kimmel walked out on stage, skipped the punchlines, and spoke plainly about the uncertain future of public media, leaving the room unusually quiet. There was no sarcasm, no smirk. Just a steady voice talking about voices being pushed out, access to real information slipping away, and what it means when truth starts feeling out of reach. The shift was immediate — viewers could feel it. This wasn’t a bit. It wasn’t satire. It was Jimmy, speaking as himself — and it felt uncomfortably real. By the next morning, the clip was everywhere. Some praised him for saying what others won’t. Critics accused him of turning late-night TV into something it shouldn’t be. But one thing was clear: he hit on something people have been avoiding. And the simple, almost offhand example he shared at the very end turned the moment from serious… into impossible to ignore.

The laughs never came—and that absence was the point. On a December broadcast of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Jimmy Kimmel stepped onto the stage of the El Capitan…