Archive for December, 2011

Can a Holiday Office Party Be Meaningful?

Friday, December 9th, 2011

It’s that time of year again, the annual office holiday parties! Great, a day full of awkward socializing, lots of food, and buying presents for people you don’t know very well. What could be better, right? Using this time to volunteer as an office instead of spending awkward quality time together!

“How can this happen?” you may be wondering. By turning your Secret Santa gifts into service donations!

“Whoopee! Wait now what? How do I actually do this in my office?”

Easy, tell employees to bring a toy that they think the employee whose name they drew would have liked as a kid. For example, bring in a football for that jock in your office, a Barbie doll for the fashionista, or a game of chess for the deep thinker. Once the gifts are exchanged, donate them to children in need! Not only does your office get to have a good laugh about the toys that they get, children also get to have an awesome Christmas thanks to your office donations!

Volunteering and donating to your office’s favorite charities is a great way to make a solid bond between co-workers. Want some more ideas to keep this holiday spirit of giving up around your office? Look, we’ve got more!

  • Volunteer for your co-workers favorite organizations or causes: Send around an email asking co-workers to share where they like to volunteer or what they are passionate about. Make these ideas into a day of employee service. Choose a place close to the office and try to get all staff members to attend. Try closing the office that day so that your co-workers can reflect on the experience together. Nothing spells teamwork like volunteering as a team!
  • Make toys or decorations for your community members: Is there a retirement community in your area? A children or family shelter? They would love help with Christmas celebrations this year! Make cards or pictures so that they can decorate their walls with lots of holiday chair. Make toys or assemble toys for families or children in need so that they can have an unforgettable Christmas! It is a great way to spark conversation among employees that will focus on something besides the stresses of work.
  • Make a donation to your company’s favorite cause: Do you have spare change laying around your desk or in your pocket? Great donate it to those who need it more than your desk surface! Vote on a charity to make donations to and pass around a collection bucket to your employees at the Christmas party. After donations are received recruit employees to personally donate the money to the designated charity. Who knows, they may like this idea so much that it will become an office tradition?
  • Pick an ornament, give a gift: Put up a Christmas tree in the office with names and ages of children or families who may be struggling this holiday season. Get in contact with your local shelters to see who will sponsor this project. Employees can grab a name, buy and wrap a present to put back under the tree. The presents will then get donated to the needy families. Not only will families get a better Christmas thanks to your company’s presents, but also your office will be decorated with the tree and Christmas presents.
  • Participate in generationOn’s Holiday Gift Campaign: GenerationOn and Hasbro have a holiday gift campaign running until December 13, 2011. Every time a pledge of service is made, a Hasbro toy is donated to Toys for Tots (up to 100,000 toys). A pledge of service can be made on behalf of an entire organization or company! It is an easy way to not only get this idea of giving back initiated into your office environment, but also a good way to give back to those in need!

Volunteering is a great way to bring employees together because it is a way to collaborate on something other than work. When all employees feel passionate about the activity they are doing they can build a more effective team.

Sounds better than your awkward office Secret Santa event or tacky sweater party? Great! Give back this holiday season, and build a more effective work team through volunteering!

What Would Martin Luther King, Jr. Do?

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

Today’s post comes from Cybil Lieu, Director, Event Management at Points of Light.

As we near Martin Luther King Jr. Day in January, we reflect on the legacy he left and his values to create a unified America.  MLKDay was created to celebrate the life of a man who served his community and neighbors. The day is a call to action to have Americans from all walks of life come together to find solutions to our nation’s most pressing problems. Today’s guest post was written by a member of our staff and highlights present day issues – and raises a question for discussion about what Martin Luther King Jr. would have done…

The other night, I was driving in downtown Atlanta with my husband around 7:30 p.m. As we approached a red traffic light, we pulled up next to a large party bus. For those of you not familiar with this concept, it is essentially a painted school bus with a “party” inside that allows people to celebrate as someone drives them around town to get drunk and yell at sober people who wonder what the heck goes on in the bus.

As we waited at the red light, a young female who was surely older than 21, looked out the rectangle-shaped school bus window and yelled, “Asians!” to her friends. She then stuck her camera out the window and took a picture of my husband and me. Clearly, we were so different that she had to take a picture of us so she would never forget us. The light turned green and the bus began to drive off. She inaccurately yelled goodbye by saying, “konnichiwa,” which means “hello” in Japanese. The party bus proceeded on its way and my husband and I went on our way without providing a reaction or making a scene.

All of this leads me to ask, what would Martin Luther King, Jr. recommend we do in this situation if he were still alive/ In my opinion, we had a couple of options:

  1. We could have rolled our window down, shouted back with equally offensive terms and stuck out our middle finger.
  2. We could have countered their misused attempt at a foreign language and racial slurs by saying something witty, grandiose and impressing them with our large vocabulary gained from a strong educational background that taught us diversity and tolerance.
  3. Do nothing and feel sorry for their ignorance and watch out the next time we roll up to a party bus.

I am still amazed that something like this would happen in a city as diverse as Atlanta, where civil rights leaders led the way alongside Dr. King to fight for equal rights for all. As a country, we have made incredible progress in working toward the dream by electing our first African-American president. But with this progress comes incidents like the one I experienced and other stories making the news today where there is a lack of civility and, to me, a perceived feeling of more visible hate.

I am fired up to think about this MLK Day and how we should all be reaching across the table, having the tough conversations and confronting the tough issues and negative perceptions that many people still believe. Instead of just hosting or attending a Sunday Supper, what if we did one everyday to address the hate and racism that still exists in our country? It’s going to take a lot to get through this.

If Martin Luther King, Jr., were alive, what would he have done in this situation?

Come One, Come All Host a Sunday Supper!

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

January 16 is the official day of celebration for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. King envisioned a world where people considered their community members to be their brothers and sisters. His idea of “brotherhood” meant that communities would not allow their members to experience hunger, poverty, or homelessness.

Does today’s world follow Doctor King’s vision? With constant facts and figures for levels of hunger, homelessness, and poverty on the rise it is hard to believe that Dr. King’s vision really has come true. Most people do not understand that these issues truly do exist in every community in more ways than one might think.

That is why we invite you to gather as a community to host a Sunday Supper. “What is this great Sunday Supper?” you may be asking yourself. From now until January 16, HandsOn Network and Points of Light are urging communities to invite their fellow neighbors to a discussion about issues that may affect them. Communities can register their Sunday Supper so that they may win a $25 gift certificate from restaurant.com. The idea being that hosting a supper may win you a supper; it is a way of recognizing the good your community is doing. You can also choose to host a community movie during your Sunday Supper.

What are some things you can talk about at your supper? Easy! The issues that were key to both Doctor King and your community members such as:

  • MLK Day is a “Day on, not a day off.” How are you going to make MLK Day “a day on?”
  • Dr. King once said, “We must work unceasingly to uplift this nation that we love to a higher destiny, to a higher plateau of compassion, to a more noble expression of humaneness.” How can you lift up your community?
  • What is one local organization for which you would like to volunteer? Why?
  • How can you encourage more people in your community, workplace or neighborhood to volunteer?
  • What is your local community doing to reach out to the less fortunate in your community? How do you think you could do more?
  • Does your community serve veterans? How are you helping them assimilate back into their daily lives once they return from their deployment?
  • What is one thing you would like to change in your community? What are tangible steps you could take to make that change happen?
  • What skills, resources or talents do you have that you could use to change your community?
  • Eleanor Roosevelt once said, “With freedom comes responsibility.” Is this statement true? If so, what responsibilities do we have as citizens?
  • What are the elements or characteristics of a healthy community? Does your community exhibit these characteristics? If not, what can you do to encourage these elements?

Great! Now that you have got some questions to ask your fellow attendees at the supper, it’s time to get started! Learn more about hosting a Sunday Supper with our MLK Day Toolkit.

Let’s keep Dr. King’s legacy alive and make his vision become reality. Join thousands and volunteer to make your community a place of neighbors rather than strangers!

What Happens When the World’s Poorest People Volunteer?

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

This post originally appeared on The Huffington Post on November 30, 2011. Today’s guest post was written by Uma Viswanathan who is the program director of Nouvelle Vie Haiti, International Association for Human Values. She has lead many youth and adult workshops ranging from stress management to trauma-relief. She received her M.A. in History of Science from Harvard University.

It’s early November, and I’m sitting in the vast auditorium at UniNorte University in Barranquilla, Colombia, listening to Accion Social present on Colombia’s extreme poor at the International Association for Volunteer Empowerment (IAVE)’s World Youth Summit. Lesly sits across the aisle from me, now a leadership and empowerment trainer through Nouvelle Vie. His back is straight as he leans forward, staring intently at the PowerPoint presentation, listening carefully to the English translation on his headphones. “Imagine living in a small one-room house with no running water, no electricity, struggling to eat every single day,” says the speaker. This exercise is not much of a stretch for Lesly’s imagination.

Lesly and I have been invited to the conference to speak on sustainable development through personal transformation. It is the first time Lesly, age 29, has ever left Haiti. It is the first time he has experienced an environment that has smooth clean roads, shiny university buildings, and steady access to electricity and internet. Putting myself in his shoes, I can understand why the vast majority of young adults from developing countries escape to wealthier countries, never to return home.

“What did you think of the presentation?” I ask him as we leave the auditorium.

“I never knew that poverty existed outside of Haiti,” he says.

He sounds uplifted, somehow.

“People everywhere are suffering, but people everywhere are also helping. I’m not alone. We’re all in this together, helping each other rise above this.”

“How do feel when you come to a country and interact with people who have so much?” I ask him later that evening. We are walking around the pool at the Hotel del Prado, a beautiful sprawling 18th century colonial hotel.

Lesly pauses thoughtfully. “Every country has its strengths. Some are material. Some are not. I don’t worry about it. What I do know is that my real strength lies in my own mind. There are people all over the world who are unhappy and who feel powerless to do something about it. But I know that if my mind is on what I don’t have, I am powerless. When I volunteer, when I think about what I can give to others, I realize how much I do have.”

It’s easy for someone like me to volunteer. I grew up in Westchester, an affluent suburb of New York, went to a great university, and live in a warm, comfortable house with a steady supply of healthy food, clean water and electricity. But what does it mean for Lesly to volunteer? What does it mean when some of the world’s poorest people volunteer?

Volunteering or selfless service is a frame of mind. It is an attitude of continually working to improve lives and the environment around you, without demanding or expecting reward.

Most people don’t expect the poor to volunteer. How can people who don’t have their basic needs taken care of think beyond their own survival? How can they have the frame of mind to care about the needs of those around them? The burden of responsibility for taking care of one’s neighbor typically falls onto civic, humanitarian or religious institutions. But what happens when these systems fail, as they usually do, due to corruption or poor planning or lack of funds? Blame. Frustration. Powerlessness. Hopelessness. Revolt.

Unless the communities that typically receive services begin to serve, to stretch more than just their hands but their own hearts, they cannot experience the power they have to transform their own lives and own communities.

Being a volunteer, serving selflessly, is a position of power. It moves you from being a victim to being an agent of change. It makes you unshakable. Because your actions are driven by inspiration, not external motivation, you do not wait for someone to guide you or reward you. The moment you stop waiting, stop complaining, stop blaming, and start taking responsibility for the life and people around you, you begin to grow. And the seed for innovation and creative problem-solving is planted in local leaders.

Jobs aren’t available in Haiti, like in many countries with struggling economies. But that doesn’t mean that communities have to wait for a job in order to address their own needs. Like Lesly, they can grow their own food from saved seeds and compost on their rooftops. They don’t have to wait for an international health worker to run a workshop for them on the use of condoms. Like Lesly, they can develop peer sexuality workshops to explore the reasons why they are escaping their lives through sex, which leads to rampant AIDS and unwanted pregnancy. And when the resources come from the outside and are created from within, when more training and opportunities come, the community will know who should be in charge. The new leaders will already be in place to use these resources wisely, to expand and grow what has already started.

Selfless service is a practice that reinforces a set of human values that transcend culture, religion, and nationality. It builds leaders who will find a way to serve their community whether we invest in them or not. Educational background, technical skills or knowledge, though necessary, are not enough to create successful local leadership. They must be coupled with the nurturing of human values and an ethic of service.

If we are waiting for leaders and entrepreneurs to rise up out of communities, we need to raise the bar and support programs that train and support individuals to serve their own communities, not just because they may create jobs for themselves and others. We need to support people who feel so much responsibility for their communities that they must serve, and solve problems in integrated, holistic ways.

“When will we stop asking for money from the World Bank and asking for aid from NGOs and foreigners?” asked Samson, one of Lesly’s fellow Nouvelle Vie youth leaders, at the World Bank Summit on youth leadership with the Haitian government last fall. “When will we do this on our own?”

This is the attitude with which, in concert with the growing global networks of financial and support, leaders will pave their own communities’ way out of poverty.

On the way to the airport, I ask Lesly how he feels about returning back to Haiti. He responds: “I was born where I was born so that I could serve Haiti. I can now give to Haiti a vision of something bigger.”

Hooray It’s International Volunteer Day!

Monday, December 5th, 2011

It’s December 5th! “So what? It’s just another Monday you may be thinking to yourself.” Think again! December 5th is International Volunteer Day! What is this International Volunteer Day and why does it even matter, every day should be a volunteer day!

December 5th is different from any other day that you volunteer because it allows volunteer organizations and individual volunteers to make their contributions visible through the Millennium Development Goals.

Are you still not convinced that this Monday is different from any other Monday? The aim of this day is to promote the importance of volunteering and to engage as many volunteers as possible to respond to key volunteering issues. Thanks to the United Nations Volunteers this day is made possible! The United Nations Volunteers have made this day possible through discussion-point videos, a photo competition, and social media. They hope to collect pictures of volunteers all across the world to be featured on their website as a way to show the world lighted up with volunteers!

Have you been convinced yet this day is important? Do you want your picture to be featured in the United Nations Volunteer mosaic? Here are some ideas that can really help your community and get your participation started in this wonderful campaign!

  • Make gifts for kids in the hospital to help the holidays feel more like home
  • Set up a buddy system for kids with special needs at your local school
  • Volunteer at a Special Olympics event
  • Get your classroom to put together a library at your local school
  • Prepare sack lunches and deliver to homeless or homebound individuals
  • Recognize veterans in your community
  • Decorate a Christmas tree at a nursing home, hospital, school, or homeless shelter
  • Mow your neighbor’s lawn
  • Offer babysit your siblings so that your parents can go out
  • Read a book to a younger sibling, blind person, or an older neighbor
  • Celebrate a birthday by getting friends to donate food items for your favorite cause instead of giving gifts
  • Make get well cards for people in the hospital
  • Collect old magazines and donate them to day care centers
  • Conduct a clothing repair or sewing workshop for those in need
  • Collect unused makeup, perfume, or other cosmetics for a women’s shelter
  • Donate old eyeglasses to an organization or place that recycles them for those in need
  • Collect old stuffed animals and toys for needy children
  • Organize a babysitting service for foster families
  • Collect old clothes and donate them for a dress-up area at a daycare center
  • Plant a garden or tree in your neighborhood
  • Collect old phone books in your neighborhood for recycling
  • Ride your bike instead of your car
  • Buy products made of recycled materials
  • Adopt an acre of the rainforest
  • Collect aluminum cans and donate the money to your favorite charity
  • Make bird feeders for your local park
  • Clean up trash along a riverbank or park
  • Form a study group to help younger children with their schoolwork
  • Visit a nursing home
  • Rake leaves, shovel snow, clean gutters, or wash windows for an elderly neighbor
  • Pick up medicine for an elderly person
  • Start a compost pile for your home
  • Teach a senior citizen how to use the computer and the internet
  • Make simple reading and math flash cards for a preschool or daycare
  • Become an animal foster parent
  • Donate dog or cat food to your local shelter
  • Make care packages with mittens, coats, socks, and hats for homeless shelters
  • Hand out food at a food bank
  • Clip coupons and give them at your local bank or homeless shelter
  • Volunteer to clean the cages at a local animal shelter
  • Bake cookies and donate them to your local soup kitchen.

Every act of kindness is a way of volunteering your time to bettering your community; from big to small it is important to share your time and talent with others. International Volunteer Day is the perfect day to start your acts of kindness. Be a part of the volunteering mosaic and show others how you make your community better.

You can continue these projects with the 2012 Martin Luther King Day of Service where community members come together to discuss the issues that affect their lives on a daily basis, Volunteering should not only be single even but rather a lifetime of service events. In the words of Martin Luther King, “All labor that uplifts humanity has dignity and importance and should be undertaken with painstaking excellence.”

Celebrate this year’s International Volunteer Day and help your community and its citizens through your favorite act of service!

UPDATE: Check out this awesome video from the United Nations about International Volunteer Day.

Focusing on the Giving in Thanksgiving: The Postducken Update

Friday, December 2nd, 2011

Michael Nealis, Interactive Strategy Coordinator at Points of LightToday’s post comes from Michael Nealis, Interactive Strategy Coordinator for Points of Light.

Last week I talked about a Thanksgiving tradition that my best friend Marc and I started a few years ago. We started getting together with our really close friends for Thanksgiving because my parents lived far away from where I was and his parents usually traveled for the holiday.

Over the years our Thanksgiving dinner has expanded in size; both in the number of guests and the amount of food. This year was the first year that the guest list ended up being fifty people, and it was the first time hosting the meal at Marc’s home instead of his parents’ house.

Misty and I were excited by the turducken.

So, with all of the firsts, we decided to add one more first to the mix. It was the first year that we decided to add an element of do-gooding to the mix.

We asked our guests to bring a donation for the Freestore Foodbank in Cincinnati so we could help other people in Cincinnati enjoy the holidays as much as we do.

The turducken emerges from the oven!

Overall, the dinner was a great experience from Turducken prep to dropping off a check for $150 at the Freestore Foodbank. We learned a few lessons about hosting a lot of people, leading dinner conversations, and crowdsourcing donations for a cause.

Be prepared for things to not go as planned. Anyone that works with volunteers knows that something is eventually going to go wrong that you never thought of. We thought that we had thought of anything that could go wrong; we had a backup meal plan, fire extinguishers, we tested all of the circuit breakers, made sure there would be enough seating, food, drinks, and space for everyone to eat at.

One thing we hadn’t thought of was that Marc lives somewhere that directions include “turn off of the paved road,” that some map sites might confuse “Old State Route 133″ with “State Route 133,” and that my cell phone doesn’t get service at Marc’s house.

Lesson learned: Make sure that everyone that’s coming to your event has correct directions to the event!

Conversations can’t be forced, but they can be seeded. In addition to collecting donations, we wanted to see if we could get people talking about why were collecting the donations – why so many people in Cincinnati need to go to the food bank to get food to help feed themselves and their families. While not a lot of people talked about hunger issues directly, there was a great conversation about how kids learn to what to eat at home and in schools, and how school lunches can help to teach healthy eating habits.

Lesson learned: If you’re hosting an America’s Sunday Supper for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, your conversations might not go just how you hope. That doesn’t mean that you won’t find somewhere to start making a change in your community!

Shoot for the moon, and don’t worry if you miss. Marc and I were really excited as we looked over the final guest list. We had asked people to bring ten dollars for the Freestore Foodbank if they had the extra cash. Between not everyone being able to make it to dinner and some people being in a tight spot, we didn’t hit our goal for donations but we did collect money that’s going to help families in crisis.

Lesson learned: It was awesome to have a goal even if it may have been too ambitious. We didn’t meet our goal, but we did help the food bank to help more families. It’s important to set goals, but don’t get discouraged if you end up not being able to meet them. You can always try again, and what you do accomplish is helpful and appreciated!

Marc thinks that turducken, and helping people, are delicious.

 

Did you have an awesome Thanksgiving? Are you making plans for America’s Sunday Supper on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day? Let us know about your plans in the comments!

All of the awesome pictures of Turduckenfest 2011 are courtesy of the great Nicholas Viltrakis, who is known to take a picture or three.

The How, What, and Where of Volunteering

Thursday, December 1st, 2011

So it is the holidays and you want to volunteer this year? This is a great desire, but how do you even begin to find a volunteer opportunity that will not only make you feel warm and fuzzy inside, but will also promote your personal interests? Choose a foundation that promotes your interests at its core!

Volunteering for a cause that you are truly passionate about will not only make your volunteering experience more enjoyable, but also more frequent. The holidays are a great time to start volunteering for your favorite cause or organization.

You may be passionate about animal rights, women’s rights, or homelessness. All are great passions but they go no further than passions if you cannot find somewhere to promote your interests.

So where can you find these amazing volunteer opportunities? The internet has great resources that place volunteers such as:

Now you’ve found somewhere to find volunteer opportunities, but you have no idea what to look for? Reflect on these questions:

  • What do you enjoy doing most or what do you like doing for others?
  • What do you see yourself accomplishing at this time in your life?
  • What kind of service projects do you enjoy doing?
  • How much time do you have to devote to service?

After you have answered these questions for yourself, choosing a service project that best suits your schedule and interests will be a breeze! Still looking for ideas? Here is a list of service opportunity ideas based on interest to get your project started!

  • Hunger or housing:
    • Help cook and serve meals at a soup kitchen
    • Gather clothing and donate it to a local shelter
    • Make hygiene kits
    • Make care packages filled with warm clothing
    • Help repair a homeless shelter
    • Partner with Habitat for Humanity and build a house
  • Elderly:
    • Spend time with a senior citizen in your community
    • Deliver meals to homebound individuals
    • Perform home repairs or yard work for senior citizens in need
    • Hold a social event for your local nursing home
    • Adopt a “grandfriend” and make regular visits to your local retirement center
  • Education:
    • Raise money for Braille or large print books for the visually impaired
    • Plan a back-to-school drive to collect school supplies for needy children
    • Set up a buddy system for kids who may be lonely
    • Bring toys to hospitalized children
    • Read books or newspapers to the visually impaired
    • Raise money to purchase and install new playground equipment at a school.
  • Health:
    • Participate in a local AIDS walk or breast cancer walk
    • Volunteer at a Special Olympics event
    • Host or give blood
    • Help a local agency compile health promotion kits
    • Host a health screening at your local stores, libraries, or schools
  • Environment:
    • Set up a recycling system for a local school or retirement community
    • Clean up a vacant lot or a river bank
    • Raise a fund to adopt an acre of rainforest or other habitat
    • Clean up trash along a river bank or local park
    • Partner with children or teens in the community to design and paint a mural at a school or in a local park
  • Children:
    • Read to students at a local elementary school
    • Host a tutoring drive for your local elementary school
    • Host a book drive in your local school, so that students can donate their old books
    • Organize a team of volunteers to mentor children or participate in a Big Brothers Big Sisters program
    • Host a youth volunteer fair
    • Create a “safe zone” that includes a play or study area for children in the community
    • Sponsor a youth sports team in your community
  • Animals:
    • Volunteer at your local shelter
    • Donate a bag of pet food to your local shelter
    • Volunteer to take the dogs for a walk
    • Clean up a your local dog park
    • Adopt an endangered animal

The holidays are the perfect time to start volunteering in your community. Thanks to generationOn and Hasbro holiday volunteering has never been easier. From November 29 through December 13, for every pledge of service made through generationOn, Hasbro will donate a toy to a child in need.

We hope that these tips help turn your pledge into a plan of action! Happy volunteering!