I’ve Never Been Wake boarding…

…until yesterday! One of the things I love most about working with the Boys and Girls Clubs of Columbus is seeing all of the amazing programs and activities the club members are exposed to. On this particular Saturday 14 members traveled to a wake boarding and paddle boarding pond in Marysville, Ohio. I know what you’re all thinking…Kids + Water=Will’s worst nightmare! That’s what I was expecting as well. However, the members were on their best behavior, were extremely excited to be trying something new, and had plenty of adult supervision!

The event was organized by a local nonprofit called HERO (Health, Education, Recreation, Organization). They frequently host outdoor events for children that may otherwise not have the opportunity to go wake boarding. In the Winter they host ski trips too!

It is so refreshing to be around kids. Just seeing them happy to go kyaking, paddle boarding, wake boarding, etc. was enjoyable. Every time I kept thinking, “man these kids are really bad, or they don’t listen” I would just laugh to myself and remind myself that they are just kids who are excited about something new, acting like kids. What seven year old do you know who listens 100% of the time? Although the main focus of the day was water sports, the kids could not participate without an introduction to water safety.

Water safety!

Water safety!

At the beginning of the day the kids were split into different groups and learned how to participate in each individual activity and were taught by a specific instructor. There was one member who was determined to not get wet and she was originally only interested in kyaking. However, after she saw everyone else trying the wake boarding course she could not help but try it out. Little did she know she LOVED it and tried it 3 different times! Not only did the members enjoy the organized activities, they also enjoyed swimming for the pure joy of it. When they ran out of things to do, they literally took turns jumping off the dock and swimming with each other.

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For those kids such as myself (in my younger days) who get tired of water after a few hours (which is still true) they had a few land activities. In addition to people-watching and sunbathing, I was able to teach the kids an Ohio State pastime…they had a cornhole set (or bean bag toss, or whatever people in states outside of Ohio call it). Regardless of what it’s called, it was fun to share an Ohio State football saturday tradition with many of the members who’d never played it before.

As I am always reflecting upon my past experiences to relate them with current ones, I couldn’t help but remember all of my nonprofit management courses at OSU that talked about collaborating with different nonprofits and finding missions that overlap. This water sports event seems like a perfect example of two nonprofits working together to accomplish one goal, of providing good kids with great opportunities!

Everyone after a day of fun in the sun!

Everyone after a day of fun in the sun!

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World Refugee Day

June 20th was World Refugee day and in honor of this CRIS put on a small festival to commemorate this day and celebrate the diverse refugee cultures represented both in Columbus and throughout the world. The event was full of ethnic foods from different refugee cultures and music from their respective areas, and of course, a friendly pick up game of miniature soccer on the Columbus Humanities Arts and Technology Academy’s front lawn. One of the recently resettled Iraqi refugees was a painter who lived in Italy for 23 years. He brought some of the artwork he was able to carry with him before resettling in Columbus to the festival. The artist’s work focuses around the experiences of refugees internally and externally displaced with an emphasis on his own experience in Iraq and Syria. He has had work commissioned by the UNHCR when he was living in Syria. Hopefully CRIS or someone can help this painter get his artwork recognized and maybe he could be commissioned to a piece within Columbus.ImageImageImage

 

 

 

 

Image Zafia’s painting was not as symbolic as some of the other works displayed.

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Volunteer Management Adventures

RMHC Perk #2: Free Gigi's Cupcakes

RMHC Perk #2: Free Gigi’s Cupcakes

My fourth week at the Ronald McDonald House has been quite an adventure, to say the least. This ‘adventure’ consisted of 50 boxes of pillows, three volunteer groups, and one volunteer orientation session. This all resulted in one highly caffeinated/sugar high summer fellow and a lot of odd projects being accomplished throughout Columbus’ home-away-from-home.

 

This week was a true learning experience in the craziness that is sometimes Volunteer Management. I worked with three different corporate groups throughout this past week who came into the House to volunteer. For the sake of the volunteer stewardship plan, I identify these groups as Special Project Groups. This was a great way for me to experience exactly what the dynamic of a special project group looks like, which will help me figure out how to thank them in the stewardship plan. One of the groups, Nationwide Insurance, helped the House out by gathering up toiletries, cleaning supplies and towels to stock all forty-two new rooms in the expansion. Grange Insurance, who came later in the week, then stocked each of those forty-two rooms with those things in addition to toilet paper, Kleenex, and blankets.

Grange Insurance Volunteer Group

Grange Insurance Volunteer Group 

Nationwide Insurance Volunteer Group

Nationwide Insurance Volunteer Group

 

One of the clear highlights of this week was the Columbus Foundation Learning Session that I had on Wednesday, June 25th. This session featured four local non-profit leaders who came to talk about non-profit career paths. This was such a great session for me, as I plan on actively pursuing a career in the non-profit sector after I graduate from Otterbein next May. One of my favorite parts of this session was to hear all about the crazy path that each of these leaders took to get to where they are today. Each of these four leaders stories left me reassured that I can succeed as long as I continue to work hard and follow my passion. As one of the leaders so aptly put it: “Your passion leads to your purpose!” Another interesting part of this session was a lengthy discussion on the importance of receiving a Masters degree. This part of the session was also very helpful, as I have been juggling about when and where I should try to receive my Masters degree. I feel reassured about my decision to go and work for a number of years before I go back to receive my Masters degree.

A beautiful mural in the Carriage House of the Columbus Foundation

A beautiful mural in the Carriage House of the Columbus Foundation

 

One final word of advice that has fueled my work this week was this: “Take the time to take care of yourself, so that you are able to work for organizations that help others.” This statement appeared in our discussion about burnout within the non-profit sector, with an emphasis on how easy it is for non-profit professionals to over extend and over commit themselves. I have tried to take more time to myself this week by working out more, eating right and getting more sleep in the hopes that I can work harder at the House.

Perhaps one of my favorite experiences this week was going out to lunch with my supervisor, Kate Ziegler, across the street at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. I had never been inside Children’s, so it was a big surprise to see how absolutely stunning it is. I was shocked at how beautiful each of the different parts of the building were. I particularly enjoyed hearing a story about how after children finish their last chemo treatment at Children’s, they crowd into the forest room and ring a bell. This story really showed me how important Nationwide Children’s and the Ronald McDonald House are to helping these families. It has been quite an exhausting week, but I can’t wait to see the lessons, experience and adventures that next week has in store!

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The Forest room in Nationwide Childrens

The Forest room in Nationwide Childrens

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Everyone’s Favorite: A Very Long Post Regarding A Very Complex Subject

The buzzword on my mind this week at the pantry is everyone’s favorite: privilege. Yes, privilege, the conversation topic that frequently incites discomfort but almost always re-shapes and progresses an individual’s understanding of themselves and the world they live in. Practically everyone experiences it in one form or another on a daily basis, yet privilege is still one of the hardest subjects for us to address because (here’s the catch-22) we often experience it unknowingly. Privilege (or lack thereof) is usually granted by uncontrollable facets of appearance, ability, orientation, and economic standing that are inherent to our identity from birth. I experience privilege in a lot of different ways; I’m white, I’m able-bodied, I come from a stable, middle class family, etc. The list goes on and on, yet I’m ashamed to admit that I rarely think about these aspects of my identity. However, every time I am at a bar, or walking alone, or even in a job interview, I am very conscious of being a woman. I have to be, because it dictates whether or not I will feel safe and respected.

That’s the difference between privilege and oppression: both largely dictate your life, but only one forces you to be conscious, cautious, and sometimes ashamed of your identity on a regular basis. Can you guess which one is which?

So, what would happen if people thought just as often and as fervently about the ways they exercise privilege? Working in the food pantry has made me look at my privilege and the way it distorts my view of the world every single day. I have never known food insecurity, but I didn’t truly know that about myself until I met others who experience it relentlessly. It did not take me long to understand the privileges that kept me far from food insecurity and, more importantly, the many ways oppression works to keep others locked into poverty.

I’ve found that in discussing privilege, many people often exhibit a very similar process to Elisabeth Kübler-Ross‘s “5 Stages of Grief.” So, allow me to present my make-shift, working draft version of “The 5 Stages of Acknowledging Privilege.”

1.)    Denial: No one likes to hear that they have an “easier time” than others exercising many rights and abilities. It’s even harder to hear that refusing to acknowledge that privilege is complicit in the oppression of others. Denial may come through unfounded stereotyping that somehow “justifies” imbalances in society or from false, placating ideologies like “I don’t see color – every person is the same.” Denial is, obviously, harmful and wrong, but it’s a very human response to new, uncomfortable shifts in perspective. But, oppression and inequality is constant, and most cannot deny it forever…

2.)    Anger: After recognizing just how deeply rooted inequality is in our society, most people are outraged at the injustice. It’s not a pleasant feeling, but it often calls people to action. When many people reach this stage, they look for ways to become activists for change.

3.)    Bargaining: This is the “I’m going to save the world!” phase. People are eager and excited to address inequality, but because the community or issue they are working with is so new to them, intricacies in history, attitudes, and need can often be overlooked. Consequently, quick fixes are frequently implemented through well-intentioned but overly simplified thought processes. It is logical to believe “Ok, people in poverty are hungry, so if I provide food, they won’t be in poverty anymore, right?” However, people quickly learn that issues of oppression are much, much more complicated. Remaining rooted in a privileged perspective and giving only what you think others need (rather than listening to their self-identified needs) does not help anyone “win” for long. There is no simple “trade” for erasing oppression.

4.)    Hopelessness: Now we move to the “I can’t save the world, so I’ll hate the world” phase. As people realize that the forces of oppression are deeply and complexly intersectional and there is no short-term answer, fighting oppression begins to feel overwhelming if not impossible. Confused, embarrassed, and defeated, it is easy to become scornful. Most are mad at the social and political systems in place that continue to enable oppression. Some lash out at others for not realizing the effects of these systems. Many become weighed down with guilt from belonging to a privileged group. Some just hate the world for being so big and so messed up. It is easy to feel as though nothing you can do is big enough to cause any real change. Thankfully, for most, this phase does not last forever.

5.)    Acceptance: Eventually, the as you examine privilege and oppression more, it becomes more important and easier (yes, easier!) to identify small ways of being a catalyst for social change. No, I am not going to single-handedly solve the AIDS crisis, but I accept that I need to be more informed about global health. Yes, I will sometimes feel guilty for being cisgender, but I recognize that shaming myself for it isn’t productive for anyone. No, I will never truly know what it’s like to be confined to a wheelchair for life, but I should listen more to the stories of those who are. I do not have all the answers. I am no one’s savior. Not every space is a space for me, and sometimes the best and only thing I can do is learn to listen more and speak less. It’s a small step, but it can be incredibly impactful to accept that yes, you are privileged, but no, that does not mean you know more or are better than anyone else.

That being said, I’ll be the first to admit that sometimes it’s a little scary to un-shelter myself from “happy, middle-class white girl land” and listen to the stories and needs of my clients at the food pantry. Sometimes I accidentally revert back to one of the first 4 steps listed above. Facing up to your own privilege is hard. But, there is no way it is ever harder than living every day under the shadow and weight of complex oppression. Sometimes it’s a little uncomfortable to work with people whose lives feel worlds away from mine. It often seems easier and faster to just hand out information and hope for the best. But, I need to take the time to hear and understand my clients and their situations through their eyes rather than my own. Empowerment is not telling someone what they need – it’s striving to provide resources, information and support to help them achieve their own goals. Privilege should not compel me to speak for others, but it should compel me to honor the voices that are too often silenced. Yes, this road is longer, and sometimes I get lost, and that’s ok, as long as I am always striving to continue towards true equality. It’s the only road that leads to lasting change.

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Researching and Reaching Out!

As I delve into the research component of my project, what will help in retrieving information on how individuals can apply for various programs that will assist Charitable Pharmacy of Central Ohio patients with the cost of premiums, co-pays, prescriptions, etc. is reaching out to state agencies and other entities to set up site visits and meetings.

At these site visits, I will meet with individuals that will provide information and resources that will assist patients with the application process of these various programs. Some of the programs this is relevant to are the Medicare Extra Help Program, Qualified Medicare Beneficiary Program (QMB), and Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary Program (SLMB), to name a few. Last week entailed reaching out to entities such as: Ohio Department of Insurance, Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, Ohio Department of Medicaid, Ohio Department of Aging, Franklin County Board of Commissioners, and others, to set up these site visits.

This week, I look forward to meetings at state agencies and also with individuals at OhioHealth and United Way of Central Ohio to retrieve information that will be significantly beneficial to the patients of the Charitable Pharmacy of Central Ohio. Information from these meetings will then be compiled, and developed into a patient guide that informs patients of the Charitable Pharmacy of the step-by-step process by which they can apply for (and also receive application assistance) the Medicare Extra Help Program and other programs that will assist with the cost of prescription coverage and premiums. Also, the patient guide will contain information on various resources that could provide patients with assistance in the application process of these programs. Many of the patients at the Charitable Pharmacy of Central Ohio are Medicaid and Medicare eligible, and retrieving the necessary information and resources they need will be significant as they assess their healthcare needs, pharmacy services, and state program options.

 

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Let the Fun Begin!

The third week of this fellowship was the first week of camp for the summer.  We started off the summer with the older kids in our Teen  Workshops.  There were two camps in the morning, Mighty Metals and Cartooning 101, and one camp in the afternoon, Muppet Mania.  Our teens LOVED these classes…and so did I!

In Mighty Metals class, our teacher and students clipped, snipped, cut, and bent wire, cans, sheet metal, and odd metal bits into robots, mobiles, jewelry, and more.  One of our students even entered her robot in the art show at the State Fair!

In Cartooning 101, original comics were invented and drawn, and students took inspiration from the classics, like some of my favorites, Calvin and Hobbes and Samurai Jack. One student wrote an amazing original comic about dinosaurs on an epic adventure – I smell a best-seller!

The last class of the day, Muppet Mania, was my personal favorite, and the class I spent the most time with.  During the morning classes, I mostly did other tasks, like checking emails, finding library books to stock our reading corner with topical books for each week and project, pulling supplies for the following week, and working on fine-tuning my own lessons.  But for Muppet Mania, I knew that an extra set of hands would be helpful in the classroom for this complicated project (and I really just wanted to make a Muppet)!  The campers did a great job, and I was so amazed at the professional looking results.  Surprisingly, Muppets are fairly easy to make, and the supplies are really inexpensive!  With some chipboard, felt, foam rubber, hot glue, fake fur, and two ping-pong balls, anyone can make their own personal, original puppet.  I made a hedgehog puppet, using my pet hedgehog (Huck) as a model, and even brought Huck in for a special treat on the last day of camp to show him off to the kids 🙂

Look at this fabulous Muppet!  His creator made him a whole wardrobe to show off.

Look at this fabulous Muppet and his stylish wardrobe! According to his creator, despite the teeth, he is a nice lake monster/goblin, not a scary one.

Works in Progress - It takes A LOT of foam and fake fur to make these creations!

Works in Progress – It takes A LOT of foam and fake fur to make these creations!

Working with teens is a lot of fun, because they tend to be a little quieter and a little more self-directed than the younger kids.  But I love working with kids of all ages and helping them cultivate their love for art, so I’m really excited for week 4 – the first week of Young Master’s camp!

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The space between duty and passion

My first year social work practicum was at Mount Carmel East, and I learned more there than I can summarize easily.  I knew that I’d picked the right career choice when I started to miss working in a clinic on the days when I was in class.  I’ll be 29 next month, and full time work and adulthood aren’t all that new to me anymore, but missing my work was.  For most of my twenties I slogged through customer service work and call center jobs in an effort to become financially stable after my surgeries.  I came to grad school intent on a career in advocacy, and eight months of working directly with patients changed my mind.

Clinics, needless to say, are my favorite part of my time with the ALSA.  I’m learning a lot during the lengthier amount of time I spend doing administrative work and program design – they’re skills I’ve had to utilize less – but Fridays connecting with patients reminds me of why I was drawn to social work and public health as a career choice in the first place.  It’s the space between duty and passion.

One of the things I’m fond of saying when people ask me about my spinal cord injury is that I will never be thankful for what happened to me, but I will always be thankful for the perspective it gave me on working with others.  When my ALS patients are frustrated by taking a little while to get out of their wheelchairs or write out something they used to be able to say, they might snap at me, and I don’t take it personally because I get it.  Sometimes that’s the key to forging a bond with patients (or just the key to staying positive during the work day.)

It’s fun, though.  I’ve gotten to help the social worker at the clinic and redesign some of their forms, and being at the clinic really helps me to get some extra perspective on the needs for the program I’m redesigning.  ALS is relatively rare, and it means that some of our patients from rural or Appalachian regions drive literally three to five hours, round trip, to be seen by the clinic or to pick up equipment.  As a city boy, it’s something I can’t really fathom, and it’s something I’ve tried to be mindful of while reworking the program.  The ALSA liked my suggestion to create a new location in southeast Ohio so that our Appalachian patients won’t have to drive as far, and it could be the difference for many of them between a three hour drive and a one hour drive.  It’s a small thing, but sometimes those are the things that make patients feel the most cared about, and that do the most to ease the burden of disease.

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The ABCs of Networking

The ABCs of networking: amateur espionage, baseball, and coffee tables.

This third week of my dynamic fellowship I began to step out of my Homeport daily work and into the wide world of non-profit volunteer programs across Columbus.  Out in this new, wide world I was schooled in the art of networking and making connections.  After completing the first leg of my SOP project I began my week with some amateur espionage (I know this is more of an E word than an A word, but it’s called the ABCs not the EBCs, so Amateur espionage it is).  I began my task of going undercover at other organizations’ volunteer orientations to research best practices that we can potentially implement at Homeport.  I attended a volunteer orientation at Dress for Success Columbus, a non-profit that provides appropriate work attire and career counseling for women entering the job force.   Experiencing orientation from a participant’s perspective allowed me to get a feel for what we need to provide for our own volunteers.  After getting a tour of their location and received a short orientation to the different volunteer opportunities I had the opportunity to sit down with their volunteer coordinator to learn the benefits they have seen from doing a monthly volunteer orientation the way they do and where they have found the need for change in their own volunteer engagement.  More importantly I made a valuable connection in the industry who was willing to be a colleague and important resource.

The next step in my networking crash course in Columbus non-profits was a fun one.  Baseball! With my fellow summer fellows I attended a Clippers game and got to spend an evening socializing and getting a break from the world of work.  We had an awesome time as we learned more about each other and continued to make connections.

After amateur espionage and baseball I was introduced to the most essential leg of my volunteer programming education, coffee tables.  On Thursday my boss brought me to a meeting with the Volunteer Administrators Network, of which she is a member and officer.  Not only did I get to meet several other volunteer coordinators from other Columbus-area non-profits, but I got to learn how to make coffee tables in the process.  This VAN meeting was   unique as it was their annual volunteer day for the members to practice what they preach.  We spent the morning volunteering at the Furniture bank where we learned how to construct coffee tables and end tables.

Volunteer administrators learning to construct coffee tables

Volunteer administrators learning to construct coffee tables

It was a very valuable day for me to see another example of volunteer orientation and to make connections while constructing coffee tables.  It was a great week and a great precursor to the Networking session next week at the Columbus Foundation.

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Pre-season Scrimmage with Adulthood

My NPO feeds hungry kids, but what these children are really starved for is affection. As I guide a new volunteer to the playground of one of our summer feeding sites, a mass of young girls with heads covered in tight Somali hijabs crowd around us, two complete strangers, pushing for hugs. They take turns, hugging us two at a time, and some of them sneak to our sides and slip their little hands in ours.

I want to stay and play and give them all of the love and attention they need and deserve, but my brain is already ticking. I have to get back, I have to send that email, I need to make that chart, did I get that answer yet? I have to get back.

I can juggle. Hacky saks, that is. Everything else is a struggle to keep in the air, and I’m sad to report that more than one thing slips through my hands and hits the floor. I feel like I’m getting a crash course in adulthood, and I’m afraid I’m not very good at it yet. I have a million things to do, but at any given moment, I’m only aware of three or four of them. All of my tasks circulate on convention currents in the core of my mind. A few rise to the top and I work hurriedly to complete them, but as I do, new tasks rise and what I was working on in one moment falls back to the bottom in another.

I’ve never worked full-time before, and my three weeks at Children’s Hunger Alliance have been a real struggle, constantly “fighting fire,” as my boss calls it. I’m trying the best I can, and I hope this scrimmage makes me better. I don’t want to fall short when the real season comes!

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Garden Metaphor

The longer I spend at the food bank, the more difficult it is to tell someone what I do here. People look for a title or a sentence that touches on your tasks daily but I don’t have that. I find it frustrating only so far as I feel people wont understand all it is that I do and how strange a position of 10 weeks is for a huge organization like the food bank. Within the last week, I performed a vast array of “tasks” and what those are could change weekly. I went on site visits to produce markets, some of which performed better than others. We decided on a date, time, and general schedule for a food insecurity workshop I am heading up in August. I surveyed clients about what services they would like information on at the produce markets, worked in our on site pantry, and facilitated/supervised garden volunteer shifts all week as well. I challenge you to keep that job description short, sweet, and to the point.

To go into more detail, one of the produce markets we went to last week was at Redeemer Lutheran Services. This oddly enough is Jill’s church and we saw each other at the market! At our table with information on how to apply for SNAP benefits and medicare/medicaid the line of people waiting for their produce would approach, gather, or stare at a distance at what we had to offer. For the most part people were interested in sharing their experience with such services. The overwhelming majority lamented their long waits on phone calls, for some sort of response to their applications, extended deadlines from overwhelmed public service workers, and general lack of communication and knowledge about what all of this means. It is like having to do your taxes alone every time some aspect of the process is changed. “You do qualify if you have this but not if you already received that”… “Do you live with anyone? oh they don’t count, they aren’t your immediate family”…It will cover this but you need to hear back about your application first”. The ifs, and, buts, only’s, and sometimes would drive insane but there is no other option, no other avenue to pursue. 

On a somewhat related note, one of my bigger projects for the summer is putting on a food insecurity workshop for the people and organizations involved in our garden and in other communities around Columbus. The goal is to discuss food insecurity, using gardening and farming as a platform for community interaction and cohesion. The garden is a great foundation to instigate education and advocacy for food insecurity because it brings people to the same level of importance. No one is doing any task more or less useful when working in a garden and it is a landscape that all experience in different ways but still, all have access. The hope is that this discussion will spur thought into what individuals and groups can do in their respective communities and circles to advocate, alleviate, or spread the knowledge of what it means to be food insecure, its history/origins, and consequences. We know that some will walk away from the workshop and perform like worker bees, spreading and proliferating the message from one bed to another and others will provide the support like water or sunlight. Any job or involvement is helpful and we hope to sprout a couple seeds of initiative and involvement through out the Columbus area.

I now find myself making metaphorical parallels to gardening as I think of ways to explain my job. I tend to many beds and plots. Some need more attention than others depending on the weather the past week, the stage of their growth and maturity. I water, I prune, I harvest, I plant. Sometimes I pollinate. Either way, in the garden, everyone involved is on the same level. We have a common baseline and we all learn by trial and error. I am pretty sure we have a 6 ft tall weed in one of the beds we never pulled out in hopes that it is a sunflower. I am still not sure if it will be one or not but it looks like something out of Jurassic Park in the midst of the delicate carrot tops.  I observe and take note of its progress I every time I walk through the garden because whether it turns into a sunflower or not, it is growing at a very fast rate in a very short amount of time.

 

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