Posts Tagged ‘Service’

Inspiring by Example

Friday, May 7th, 2010

In honor of Mother’s Day, HandsOn Blog features a guest post from Jenny Viars, a Program Coordinator at Winston-Salem Industries for the Blind based in North Carolina.  You can read her personal blog at Great Little Stories.

As Mother’s Day approaches, I have been thinking about ways that my mom taught me the importance of volunteering and other forms of service in the community. The best and most lasting instruction is that which is by example, and learning to serve one’s community is no different.

My mother was a stay-at-home mom, and as an only child, I went with her everywhere.  My mom was very active in our small town, and I tagged along as she delivered Meals-on-Wheels, exercised her Library Science degree by helping at the local library, sang in community choruses, and helped out in many ways at church.  I’m sure that often, I was more in the way than anything, but I still have very vivid memories of the places we went.  My mom also volunteered at myriad school functions and tirelessly helped me with all those school fundraisers (how much wrapping paper does one family need, after all?).

Not only has my mom always been generous with her donation of time and energy, but physical donations to help those in need were always at the forefront, as well.  Outgrown clothes went to a local organization that collected items for children in need; other unused items went to the local charity-affiliated thrift store.  I was raised with the knowledge that others in our community and beyond did not have everything they need, and that it is important to share whenever possible.

Interestingly, I also learned another important life lesson: the power and importance of saying no.  It is so easy to say yes to everything and often so difficult to say no to an organization in need.  But my mom taught me that sometimes you have to choose; that it’s better to give your best to the ones you choose than spread yourself too thin. I try to remember this in my daily life; my varied interests and professional organizations can easily overwhelm my calendar, so I try to be conscious of the things I schedule.

In writing this, I started trying to remember when I started volunteering.  I was always involved in church activities as a child, and I started babysitting and working with children by about the age of 11.  Both of these interests have carried over to adulthood – I am active in my current church with choir, handbells, and children’s ministry, and a large part of my non-profit job is working with children with visual impairments.  In addition, I love keeping up with what is going on in my community, especially local nonprofits and their projects, and I actively support several.  I frequently donate to my own community charity-affiliated thrift store (and make purchases there!), and I belong to a local Kiwanis Club, a national service-based organization that focuses on children. I don’t have children of my own yet, but I am sure that I will be active in their schools and other interests, also.  Sound familiar? I now see how much of my involvement today mimics what I watched my mom do.

Perhaps most importantly, I learned from my mom that the value of volunteerism is indefinable, that giving one’s time and resources can make a palpable impact on the lives of others.  I’ve even taken that lesson into my career path at a nonprofit, where part of my job is actually volunteer coordinator.  I know that many of the programs we have at my agency would not be possible without our volunteers, and this appreciation inspires me  to volunteer all over again. Without the inspiration and leadership of my mom, my path and my interests might have been much different…and not nearly as much fun.

Finding Your Houses of Parliament

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

My mother painted the Houses of Parliament in the basement of our century home. Early on a Saturday morning, years ago now, I heard her toiling away in the rather unattractive and unwelcoming basement.

When I crept down the stairs, I found her in London; a London she had painted on 10-foot panels of foam board for a small community theater bereft of funds.  For many children, this moment might have been odd. For me, it was rather normal.

My mother was always doing something odd for someone and doing that something for free. The “doing things for people” sat fine with me. However, the “for free” part, as a teenager scrounging for every dollar I could squeeze out of a part time job, that part confounded me.

With Mother’s Day upon us, I was thinking about how that confusion transformed into a most cherished clarity… and it happened like this:

Time and time again, there she would be, painting detailed scenery, serving on boards, creating educational programming for community centers, visiting senior citizens we weren’t related to…. and all for nothing.

At least I thought it was for nothing. Little did I know how those lessons of selflessness and service were slowly, with a kind of genetic osmosis, seeping their way into my DNA.

What resulted from her silent, illustrative appreciation for service was a deeper understanding of my place and role on this earth. She showed me that either I could choose to be a cog in a mechanism for good, or I could be a sabot wedged into those cogs, merely slowing progress.

At first blush, aspiring to be just a “cog” may seem downright uninspiring, undistinguished….and well, kind of lazy.  But my mother’s actions spoke volumes on just the opposite of those terms. Her life was, and still is to this day, about an understanding of, and acting on, the belief that we are all connected. It is an understanding that everyone is a “cog;” no more, or less important than the next. That we should be working for something far greater than the total square footage of our homes, or the price tag of our cars.

Being a “cog” in the mechanism for good is the most important role we can play in life. That’s not to say we don’t pursue or own goals. We can strive to become CEOs or the best landscaper in the business, but how we get to those goals collectively defines us as a society.

As we work towards our goals, are we also looking for ways to be of service to others? In doing so, remember that each little act of help, each hour of service, oils the cogs and keeps that mechanism for good running smoothly.

I am proud to say I am just a cog, because I understand the fact that there’s really no “just” about it. My life is not just about me; I am no more, and no less, important than anyone else.  What is important is how I choose to live my life.

What is important is that we all look for ways to be cogs in a mechanism for good. What is important is that we all continually seek out our own Houses of Parliament, and paint them with as much passion, with as much care, and with as much importance as my mother did in the basement of our century home.

Volunteering to Help Clean Up the Gulf Coast Oil Spill

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Since April 30th, HandsOn Network affiliates in the Gulf Coast region have been hard at work organizing volunteer response to the disastrous BP oil spill.

Catherine Gautier, Executive Director of HandsOn Mississippi, writes:

“Between our tornados, flooding, and the oil spill, Mississippi is working on balancing all of the mobilization needed to address concerns throughout the entire state.

One of our biggest needs right now is finding educators to come in. A major lesson of Hurricane Katrina was that there were not enough spontaneous volunteers educated on some of the hazards in advance of deploying to the field.  If anyone knows of some experts who could aide us in educating the community, we would be most grateful.

Also, we are in need of some mental health workers. Mental health ills still have not peaked in the nearly 5 years since Katrina, and this new disaster – just after so many people have felt like recovery might be possible – is mentally and emotionally devastating.  I have locations for trainings and sessions identified but need experts in both areas.

We need a couple volunteers to assist our office with developing content and handing communications(they don’t have to be on site).

Finally, we need one person to be dedicated to attending to the management of the oil spill volunteers, trainings, and events and to be the Hands On Mississippi Point of Contact.  We would like to put someone into place immediately and then to seek funding to turn the volunteer position into a paid one as funding is available.

    There is a great deal of flooding currently along our beaches and harbors.  This has delayed some progress, but quite a few volunteers have been out cleaning debris to lessen impact.”

    HandsOn Network affiliates and nonprofit partners across the Gulf Coast are working collaboratively to ensure the most efficient and effective response.

    HandsOn Network affiliates in California have offered much appreciated support, lessons learned and best practices from their own experience managing the Bay Area oil spill in 2008.

    Over the weekend, approximately 600 volunteers in Escambia County, Florida helped clean up Pensacola Beach and on Perdido Key, the County Commissioner responsible for that area said that over 500 volunteers were assisting in the clean-up.

    So far, BP has not been able to provide concise communications with regard to their intentions to work with volunteer groups.

    A National Disaster Task Force conference call is scheduled for today at 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time.  HandsOn Network will provide additional information as the volunteer response efforts unfold.

    To get involved in the clean-up efforts, contact:

    Florida

    Volunteer Florida

    Alabama

    Volunteer Mobile

    Mississippi

    HandsOn Mississippi / HandsOn Gulf Coast

    South Mississippi VOAD Disaster Response Conference Call Notes 5/1/10

    Louisiana

    HandsOn New Orleans

    Volunteer Ascention

    Volunteer Baton Rouge

    Volunteer Louisiana

    Louisiana Serve Commission Oil Spill Volunteer Information

    Texas

    Volunteer Center of the Coastal Bend

    Volunteer Houston

    Michelle Nunn: What Social Media Can Do for Nonprofits

    Saturday, May 1st, 2010

    Last week at the LEAD Summit in Washington, D.C., we heard from Allison Fine () about the many things social media can offer nonprofits. Here, Michelle Nunn sums it up in 23 seconds. Enjoy!

    Enormous Needs

    Thursday, February 25th, 2010


    “I haven’t said this out loud before, but the enormity of his need actually frightens me,” she confessed.

    While we waited for the curtain to come up, my girlfriend Elaina told me about a ten year old boy named Ty who is a friend to her son Graham.

    “Ty lives in our city’s housing projects with his mother who is raising him on her own. She suffers from severe diabetes and is frequently hospitalized for extended periods of time with life threatening illnesses.”

    “Graham and Ty have been close friends since kindergarten,” Elaina told me. “When Graham recently sprained his ankle playing basketball, Ty was the only one of his teammates who rushed over to see if Graham was all right. It was Ty and the coach that helped Graham limp off the court.”

    She paused, but soon continued.

    “I went to pick Ty up for a play date this morning and, in front of him, his mother told me she was worried because he was becoming such a fat pig. She actually used the words fat pig! And then she handed him a pop tart for breakfast.”

    Elaina shook her head sadly.

    “He’s a fabulous kid, really he is, but his needs are so enormous.”

    “Every day when I pick Graham up from the after-school program, Ty asks to come home with us.”

    “This is irrational,” she said, “but I worry that all the negative things that Ty’s been exposed to and forced to live with will somehow rub off on Graham.”

    “None of Ty’s circumstances are his fault,” I offered. “He probably doesn’t like them any more than you do.”

    “I know,” she sighed.

    We were quiet for a moment.

    “What do you think would it cost you and your family to become wide open to Ty, to commit to him? What is the worst thing that could happen?”

    “I don’t know,” she said. “I guess I’m afraid that his enormous need would completely consume our family life.”

    There was another pause in the conversation.

    “What would you like Graham to learn from the choices you make about Ty?” I asked.

    The lights dimmed over the audience and the show we were waiting to see began.

    We didn’t return to our conversation about Ty, but he stayed on my mind.

    Elaina’s struggle seemed immensely important to me, but I couldn’t put my finger on why I felt so triggered by it.

    Then, in the car this morning my husband and I discussed something I’ve been grappling with at work.

    For most of my career I have advocated for people to be active, engaged citizens.

    Last week, I initiated an online conversation by asking “If you could direct the full force of the American volunteer spirit to effect change on a single social issue, what would you ask people to do?”

    One respondent said that while he believed that volunteers alleviated suffering, he didn’t believe they were capable of making systemic change.

    I told my husband that even after twenty years of this work, I found myself worrying about what he said, worrying about the possibility of him being right.

    My husband smiled at me.

    “I think individual action might be all there is,” he said.

    “What do you mean?” I asked.

    “There are so many huge, international NGO’s set up to end poverty,” he said, “but what really works?”

    There was a pause.

    “In the end, it boils down to individual, human relationships,” he said.

    I nodded, finally understanding why my friend’s story seemed so urgent.

    It’s possible that breaking the cycle of poverty boils down to the choice Elaina makes about Ty and the choices the rest of us make about the Tys we find in our lives.

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