Archive for the ‘Just for Fun’ Category

“Play ball!” 3 Ways to be an Awesome Baseball Volunteer!

Wednesday, April 11th, 2012

April symbolizes many things-spring, Easter, Passover, and most importantly baseball! That’s right, this month major league baseball kicks off its 2012 regular season.  Baseball is a chance to enjoy the awesome weather that the spring and summer offer, but it’s also a time to enjoy some friendly competition; However, while baseball is one of many American’s favorite past time, it is also a unique opportunity to volunteer! While you may be wandering how volunteering and baseball are linked, surprise, surprise! We have already figured that out for you!

Here are 3 ways you can be an amazing baseball volunteer!

 

  1. Put your strength to work! Baseball players are great athletes so why not use your strength to help someone? One day after practice or on an off day-volunteer! With the recent tornadoes and storms, you can gather your team and go help clean up communities that have succumbed to the recent disasters. Recently, a Harriburg, PA high school baseball team volunteered to clean up their communities. The team was in the area for a high school baseball showcase at Rent One Park in Marion and decided to stay and spend a portion of their spring break assisting victims of last month’s tornado. How cool is that? Of course, everyone hasn’t recently suffered a natural disaster, but I’m sure there are other ways for you and your team to volunteer in your communities!
  2. Host a baseball camp!  Organize a baseball camp for the youth in the community to promote sportsmanship, fitness, and camaraderie and end the camp with a baseball game! You can also get your community leaders involved in the event by asking them to teach a session or mentor a youth during the camp! Events like the baseball camp really motivate students to work harder at sports and school and can play an especially important role for young people coming from difficult backgrounds or family situations. Sports can also help teach students responsibility, accountability, teamwork, a work ethic, and many other positive qualities including self-pride.
  3. Become a little league volunteer! Whether you’re coaching a team, carpooling to ensure that another teammate gets to practice, or providing refreshments, you are vital to the team! As a parent volunteer, you have the opportunity to spend quality time with your child in a safe, fun-filled environment. Oftentimes, parent and child social lives parallel each other. Volunteering allows your life and your child’s life to intersect on common ground, with shared interests and goals. Similarly, if you are not a parent, volunteering to coach a baseball team allows you to mentor or provide leadership to a child. As a volunteer, you can teach intangible skills that will stick with the child for their entire lives.

There are so many fun and awesome ways to become a baseball volunteer, and if you’re already a baseball volunteer, GREAT! Keep up the good work and thank you!

 

Just Go Out and Volunteer!

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

Share a Smile!

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

Happy Share a Smile Day! Would it make you crack a smile to learn that March 1 is also National Pig Day and Peanut Butter Lover’s Day? There are so many things to smile about; why not take the opportunity to use a few of those smiles for good?

Share your smile! Some people may not be used to receiving smiles from strangers. That can be easily changed! March 1 is a great excuse to give others a reason to smile. Call an old friend or write a good old-fashioned letter to let friends and family know you’re thinking about them. Check out our post on how to thank volunteers to spread the smiles.

Commit random acts of kindness Open a door for a person with their hands full. Leave a nice comment on your favorite organization’s or volunteer’s Facebook page. Help someone with a chore. Offer a couple hours of free babysititng to stressed parents. When in doubt, follow Elmo’s lead to volunteer random acts of kindness.

Name one thing that makes you smile… And share it with others. Simply reflecting on and sharing the good things in our lives can brighten the lives of others!

Make your community smile Consider spending some time cleaning up graffiti, or scouring your home for used books to donate to the library. These contributions are sure to make your community smile for longer than a day!

How do you plan to celebrate Share a Smile Day today? Let us know in the comments below!

Related Posts

Eight Tips for Writing the Perfect Thank You Note

Random Acts of Kindness Week

6 Ways Volunteers are making the Super Bowl awesome!

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

While the Super Bowl is a time to gather around the television with your friends and family to cheer on your favorite team, it is also an awesome time to serve your community. Indianapolis residents have welcomed the Super Bowl with plenty of cheer and grandeur, but they are also pretty excited to host the amazing Super Bowl volunteers who will help to make this year’s Super Bowl a success!

  1. Super Baskets of Hope: Dedicated to delivering 7,000 baskets of hope to hospitalized children, the Super Baskets of Hope is the first project by a Super Bowl host city to reach across the country. Nearly 1,000 volunteers showed up to Bankers Life Field house in Indianapolis this Monday to create baskets of hope. Former Indianapolis Colts coach and proud spokesman for the organization, Tony Dungy, knew Indianapolis would take the legacy and service aspect of the game seriously.
  2. Volunteers knitted scarves for Super Bowl Volunteers! Burrr!!! Indianapolis can be brutal in January! And according to the TIME.com news feed, Indianapolis residents welcomed the 8,000 Super Bowl Volunteers by knitting 13,000 scarves to keep volunteers warm during their stay in Indianapolis. To get into the knitting spirit, Indiana residents participated in “knit-ins” at libraries, cafes and shops across the state. Thanks to the unique and creative blue-and-white scarves, Super Bowl volunteers are highly recognizable. 
  3. One Super Bowl attendee reported the amazing help volunteers provided him when simply asking for directions. Before joining the festivities, volunteers provided him with information about what time the park-and-ride services began, directions to the entrances, and helped him to navigate through security.
  4. Other volunteers are helping to work events like the “NFL Experience,” a family fun event where people of all ages and physical ability can feel like they’re playing in a professional game. For the “NFL Experience” volunteers are needed to point families to their desired activity, the restrooms, concessions, and pick up trash, etc.
  5. Save Our Adolescents from Prostitution (S.O.A.P.) Volunteers: about 150 volunteers for S.O.A.P. are heading to Indiana before the event, not to tailgate, but to pass out soap at Indianapolis motels. Each bar of soap will have a label on it with phrases like “Are you being threatened?” or “Are you witnessing young girls being prostituted?” The soap provides the number for a human trafficking hotline so that those at the hotel, or young girls who are being trafficked, will see it and can call for help.
  6. Join the NFL and United Way’s Play 60 campaign to fight child obesity! Sometimes what is really needed is one person to get things started and organized. Help kids in your community increase their physical activity and eat more healthful foods. Use your talents to motivate kids to move more and eat better. Soon, kids in a class, neighborhood or community are getting fit together. 

Back home there are ways you too can serve your community during the Super Bowl. One volunteer said they plan on hosting a Super Bowl party for the youth at their church. You can also donate money to organizations such as the Souper Bowl, an organization dedicated to fighting hunger.  Whether they are advocating a specific cause or pointing people in the right direction, volunteers are everywhere in Indianapolis serving their community and making the Super Bowl awesome!

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.

Happy Turkey Day!

Thursday, November 24th, 2011

We are taking a break from the blog world today to enjoy our turkey dinners, time with family, and volunteering events. Here are some past blog posts to get you inspired to give back today! Happy Thanksgiving and we will be back tomorrow for Black Friday madness!

We Are Thankful for Our Volunteers This Holiday Season!

Focusing on the Giving in Thanksgiving

Volunteering During the Holidays

How is Cooking a Turkey Like Bringing in a New Volunteer?

10 Creative Ideas to Put the “Giving” Back Into Thanksgiving

 

Focusing on the Giving in Thanksgiving

Monday, November 21st, 2011

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

A few years ago, my best friend and I decided to break with tradition and host our own Thanksgiving dinner.

It started out simply enough. The first year we ran a race on Thanksgiving morning then cooked dinner for twelve people. Then things got a little out of hand.

You see, that first year was pretty easy, so each year we tried to have a bigger dinner than the previous year, just to see how many people we could end up cooking for.

This year looks like it’s going to be the biggest one yet. We’re looking at around forty people on the guest list, and we’re planning to start prepping the meal three days before we serve it.

There is no ordinary turkey for us. Instead, we make a turducken.

This year is going to be a little different, though. we’re still going to have a massive amount of food and friends, a lot of laughter, and everyone’s going to eat way too much. Who are we to mess with tradition?

We’re starting a new tradition this year, though. This year we’re asking our guests to bring a donation for the Freestore Foodbank in Cincinnati.

The idea came up when we were making plans for this year’s Thanksgiving dinner. We realized we weren’t going to be able to run the race on Thanksgiving morning like we usually do (the race supports Ronald McDonald House in Cincinnati), and we were wondering how we could still support a nonprofit in Cincinnati over Thanksgiving.

So, this year, we’re asking our guests to bring themselves, their families, and a little bit extra to help out the people in Cincinnati who might not be having a big Thanksgiving dinner with their families this year.

Our dinner is a great opportunity for all of us to take some time to think about Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, which isn’t very far away. Dr. King’s envisioned a beloved community where people would not stand for their neighbors to be homeless or hungry, where human existence is social and we reach out to our neighbors to come together.

If you’re wondering how you can turn your Thanksgiving dinner into something a little bit bigger, check out the MLK Day Toolkit for some ideas on how to start a conversation about how to address the issues that are affecting your community.

You don’t have to talk about hunger issues, we decided to support a food bank because of the massive amount of food that’s going into one meal, you can talk about kids not having anywhere safe to play in your neighborhood, or how you can help people without a home find a safe place to sleep, or talk about how to support a school where students may not have all of the supplies that they need.

There are a lot of ways that you can start making a change in your neighborhood with your Thanksgiving dinner. It doesn’t have to be a big change, it doesn’t even have to be a move to action. Even the smallest changes start with a conversation about what needs to be done and how you can make that change a reality.

So, in between welcoming family and friends into your home this Thanksgiving, checking that the turkey is done, and watching football, try to take a few minutes to talk about what you and your friends can do to make your community just a little bit better.

Who knows what plans can be made over a second helping of mashed potatoes.

Volunteering Tips for the Zombie Apocalypse

Monday, October 31st, 2011

They’re coming.

The shuffling, mindless creep towards the inevitable end of everything we know and love.

Zombies.

What’s the best way to deal with the impending zombie apocalypse?

Start recruiting volunteers to help you rebuild society. It might sound a bit strange to start thinking about rebuilding after the zombie apocalypse before it’s happened, but you always start recruiting volunteers before you need them. Besides, we know not to start recruiting volunteers on the day of our projects, why would recruiting for the zombie apocalypse be any different?

Get ready for the inevitable rise of the living dead. Being prepared is the most important part of any emergency, and different emergencies require different kinds of preparedness. there are some basic steps that you want to follow for all emergencies, though. Make sure that you have a plan in place and everyone in your family knows what to do when the zombies finally come.

When the zombies come, it’s all about efficiency. Remember, it’s not about what everyone else is doing, it’s about what works best for you. Don’t focus on the preferred or cool way to get the job done. Focus on getting things done. Partnering with big companies might seem like the best way to stay alive when the zombies come, but building strong partnerships with your neighbors is important, too. They’re not as flashy, but smaller organizations are more adaptable, which makes survival easier. Zombies hate that!

Braaaiiinnnsss. Once the zombie apocalypse starts to wind down, the survivors are going to need to start rebuilding society. You’ll need all kinds of volunteers to help rebuild, and volunteers with specific skills will be helpful in restoring society to it’s pre-zombie splendor. You’ll want to recruit skills-based volunteers, because the very things that the living dead feed upon will help to rebuild society. Yes, skills-based volunteers keep all of their knowledge in their braaaiiinnnsss.

The Double Tap. Not only effective in making sure a zombie goes down and stays down (they’re good fakers, zombies), the double tap can be used in just about every aspect of working with volunteers. Whether it’s making the ask for volunteers, orienting volunteers, training volunteers, or thanking them for a job well done, always take the time to do it twice.
Although, in the case of zombies it’s important to hit them twice quickly, the volunteer double tap should be spaced out. You don’t want to ask someone to volunteer twice within the first minute of meeting them, even if hitting the zombie twice with your crowbar is a good idea. Spread out the time between your asks, orientations, and trainings. Things might be busy for people, what with all of the running from zombies, and they might not be able to volunteer when you first ask them. Ask again later, and you just might find yourself a new volunteer.


A little bit of thanks goes a long way. Lets not kid ourselves. When the zombies come, there’s going to be yelling and screaming and panicking, but if you’re prepared you can really reduce the amount of insanity that will come with the zombies. You’ll have your crew of volunteers around you, ready to rebuild when the world comes to its senses. Don’t forget to say thank you to your volunteers while things are crazy, and after society is rebuilt. There are many ways to say thank you, so don’t be stingy.


Have you had to survive a zombie apocalypse and rebuild society? Let us know how you did it in the comments!

An AmeriCouple’s Story: Colleen and Adam

Monday, February 14th, 2011

Today’s story comes from Colleen Holohan, Member Development Manager at Massachusetts Promise Fellowship.  Colleen tells about how she met her husband through service.  Happy Valentine’s Day!

Eight years ago this summer, I had just finished college and was excited to begin my first year as an AmeriCorps*VISTA with the Massachusetts Campus Compact (MACC). I was a service nerd in college and spent my free time volunteering at afterschool programs and organizing student service events, so I thought AmeriCorps would be an appropriate next step. I was looking forward to new experiences in Boston and meeting new and interesting people. I never would have imagined that I’d meet my husband!

My favorite part of being an AmeriCorps member is that you get put in challenging situations with people you wouldn’t normally cross paths with. I’ve met people from different parts of the country (and the world) with a variety of life experiences and backgrounds. This diversity within my experience has led me to forge close friendships with people I never would have thought I had any commonalities with…which leads me to Adam Reinke.

When I first saw Adam at Pre-Service Orientation, I thought to my self, “Wow, I’ve never met someone so genuinely nice and simultaneously obsessed with Wisconsin sports!”  I learned later that this was something called Midwest charm. Growing up in New York and not have strayed much from the east coast, I had never been to Wisconsin nor had I heard of Marquette, the alma mater he was so extremely passionate about.

Our first year of service together kicked off a great friendship. The dozens of icebreakers and early morning service projects taught us a lot about each other-you’d be surprised at what several rounds of Two Truths and a Lie can bring out! After our first year of service, we both decided to keep the experience going and became VISTA Leaders for the MACC program. We spent countless hours together planning workshops for our peers and supporting them through their challenges. Eventually, our friendship turned to more and the rest is history!

This past September, Adam and I got married in Boston and several of our fellow AmeriCorps*VISTA friends were there to celebrate with us!  We both continue to be involved with AmeriCorps through our non-profit work. I serve as the Member Development Manager with the Massachusetts Promise Fellowship, a statewide AmeriCorps program that places members at non-profits, city agencies, and schools to create, lead, and manage youth development projects.

I love my job because I work towards creating a service experience for AmeriCorps members that was just amazing as mine! Adam serves as the Director of Community Engagement with ACCESS, an organization that works to ensure that all young people have the financial information and resources necessary to find an affordable path to college. In his role, he works to create new community partnerships for the organization, manages the Center for College Affordability, and has supervised numerous AmeriCorps members throughout the years.

I’m so grateful for my years of AmeriCorps and all of the opportunities the experience provided me with. It has definitely shaped my life. I kick off every service year by telling my Massachusetts Promise Fellows that the year ahead will be an amazing experience-and may even lead to finding their perfect match!

6 Ways To Make Volunteering More Fun

Monday, January 31st, 2011

We loved seeing the 66% increase in people choosing “The Dreaded Stairs” over the escalator after the stairs were made more fun in this video.

It got us thinking… if we made a conscious effort to make our volunteer projects more enjoyable for volunteers, would we see a 66% increase in the number of volunteers who return to the project the next time it occurs?

Seems like a theory worth looking into, right?!

Here are a few ways to make your volunteer project more fun:

1.  Foster Introductions.  Most of us enjoy meeting new people.  Consider starting the project with an activity that introduces your volunteers to at least one new person.  Try adding an ice breaking activity to the opening moments of your project.

2.  Play Music.  If your project involves physical activity, like landscaping or painting, consider adding a soundtrack!  Imagine your volunteer crew singing along and / or adding dance moves to the day.  What fun!

3.  Break Bread. Consider taking a break for breakfast, lunch, dinner or a snack.  People connect with each other at meal times.  If you don’t have the budget to provide refreshment, try making the project a potluck.

4.  Create Conversation. We humans love to connect with one another.  Consider building in a closing conversation where your volunteers can discuss the difference they made, concerns they may have and next steps they’d like to take.  (We know it sounds serious – but it really is fun!)  You can find ideas for building group reflection into your project here and here .

5.  Make Memories.  Take photos and / or video of your volunteers at work and share the results on Twitter and Facebook.  Your volunteers will have fun commenting on the memories made.

6.  Celebrate! Consider closing your project with a celebration of the accomplishments your volunteers made.  This could be a celebration at the project site or a meet up at a local restaurant afterward.

Enjoy!