We are pleased to have a team of Integrative Manual Therapy practitioners visiting the orphan home in Nepal for a week in May to introduce simple health management techniques to the children and staff. This program is the initiative of another nonprofit organization, Eva Nepal, aimed at villages in Nepal, and was coordinated to come spend some time at Joining Hands Nepal by the Vice Chair of our Board, Julie McNeal, who will also be a participant in the program. You can learn more about the program and their preparations at their blog, handovermatter, including a few posts from our own Julie McNeal.
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Thursday, January 12, 2012
The Power Of Video
I went to a workshop called "How To Make a Video That Doesn't Suck" hosted by Benjamin Packard of Retainer Media tonight. It was a great inspiration to any of us who have a moving story to tell and not a lot money to tell it. Here is a perfect example that Benjamin shared with us at the beginning of the workshop of a small nonprofit. Just try to watch this video and not be curious to visit their website afterwards!
Monday, January 9, 2012
Love Is A Creative Act
About a year ago I wrote a sort of manifesto, a document of my life philosophy as it stood at that time. It was an important action for me to undertake at that time because it was right before I was to undertake the first steps in the process of planning and building this new organization and global community that is ForWorld Thinking. The most interesting and important idea to come out of that process for me was the idea that love is a creative act:
"There are so many ways to engage in creative acts in every day life, big and small. When you choose to make a meal for family or friends from scratch rather than cooking frozen meals or getting take-out, that is an act of creation. The love you put into the food is absorbed by everyone who eats it. When you inspire a spark in another person through education, that is an act of creation. The spark ignites a new passion and opens a new path for the other person. When you begin a project at work or school or through charity, that is an act of creation. Whenever you bring something new into the world through love or inspiration or intuition, it is an act of creation that serves you and others. The two key elements in all acts of creation are time and love. If you devote your time and energy to an action, and you perform it with love and passion, it is more likely to be an act of creation. This harkens back to the notion of making every action like the first time, so you can maintain the inspiration and love for the action. When we are exhausted of cooking and cannot feel the love, we rush or we order pizza or we cook frozen meals, and we lose the power of the creative action. When we are exhausted of teaching and cannot feel the love, we rely on books or videos or rote lecture rather than discussion, and we lose the power to inspire creative thought. When we are exhausted of work and cannot feel the love, we coast or take shortcuts or shift responsibility to others, and we lose the power of creativity in our work. The more of our time we put into our actions, the more love and genuine care we put into our actions, the more creative force we exert in the world.The question then is: how can your love inspire you to act to help create a better world to live in?
Action, we are nothing without action. Intuition, emotion, and thought amount to nothing without action. There is no purpose for the existence of this material world and our presence in it without action. We are put here to act, not sit idly by and let fate or the gods determine our life’s course. We are put here to act, not to react to our environment or our circumstances or the people around us and how they act. We create our environment through our actions. We create our circumstances through our actions. We create our relationships with the people around us through our actions. We create our world through our actions. We create our life through our actions. Our actions are all we have to function in the material world and make an impact. Creative action is our purpose in life."
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Give Your Gift
To wrap up this week's theme of individuals making use of their unique skills to serve both their community and the global community, I want to highlight an organization that actually helps facilitate this process for individuals and nonprofits, Catchafire.
I was directed to their website by a post from their CEO and founder, Rachel Chong, over at the Fast Co.Exist blog entitled "Making Volunteering More Popular by Making it More Relevant":
"Last year, 26.3% of Americans volunteered, but only 1.8% of Americans volunteered their professional skills (PDF).I believe wholeheartedly in the mission of Catchafire of matching relevant skill sets with corresponding needs in the nonprofit world. In fact, it is exactly what we hope to do on a global level for our foreign partners and the communities in which they work and live once we get the appropriate tools and systems in place to make it happen. Stay tuned in the year to come for progress updates on the implementation of our volunteer program and how it will work to make this kind of skill-matching possible for us and our partners. In the meantime, if you have some special professional skills and a little free time to volunteer, why not head on over to Catchafire and see if they might be the right organization to help you match those skills to someone in need and make a truly impactful volunteer contribution this year.
When people don’t have the option to volunteer in a way that draws on their strengths or their skills, when people don’t have the option to volunteer in a way that make sense to them, and when volunteering doesn’t result in an impactful outcome, people volunteer halfheartedly or they don’t volunteer at all. This is a pretty serious consequence. In fact, the volunteer rate in America over the past 10 years has dropped nearly 3%.
We need to give volunteering a make over. We need to make volunteering relevant again. In fact, 95% of nonprofits say they would like these services pro bono, but don’t know where to go to get them. If so much of the population has these skills to give away, and we’re able to convince these people to volunteer their skills, we have supply to meet this demand. I am confident that more than 1.8% of people want to volunteer their skills. We just need to give them the right opportunities."
Read the rest of Rachel Chong's post at Fast Co.Exist.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)