Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Etc


Laramie Junior High student Kollin West wears what has become a controversial bracelet at his school. Andy Carpenean/Boomerang photographer
 One way to get attention for your cause: I love boobies

My new desired career: Social Venture Capital Fund Manager

Smart Athiests: Basic Religion Test Stumps Many Americans--research by Pew

Monday, September 27, 2010

Leadership

A friend recently mentioned that leadership is not a position that one takes, or is awarded. Leadership is the state of being where others intrinsically look towards you for leadership. The ones that get things done even without authority. The ones that people think of when they are in need of mental or emotional support. Who are the leaders in your life? How would you define leadership? I realize I'm trying to mount the horse of leadership when I have no idea how to ride it. The older I get the more inexperienced I feel!

Hope

This blog seems to have the theme of hope lately. There are many things that stink. But there are many things that make us get up in the morning.

Today I had the opportunity to attend a conference on Bringing Prosperity to the smallholder African farmer through livestock. Gregg BeVier shared from the Global Development group of the Bill Gates foundation regarding the opportunity to double incomes from $1 to $2 a day by teaching rural farmers how to take care of and providing cows. Simple solutions such as a cow can create lasting change.

I talked with a woman who held my same position at work who just returned from working with Global Fund for AIDS and Malaria prevention. We got pumped about education, youth, and what the future will bring if we focus on forming environments where youth can be healthy.

Received an email from a college friend that has helped create an organization in response to his experience in India.

Read an email from another friend who chose hope over despair while navigating a difficult situation in the workplace.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Where are you putting your money?

We can be the change we want to see in the world if we are intentional about where we spend our money. I'm guilty of buying goods and services without thinking ahead about who I'm buying from, how that company is generating the product/service, and how in that process people in other countries or locally are being impacted by our purchase.

Money makes the world go 'round, right?

What if the world went around only for the corporations that paid workers just wages? That supported unions? That took a stand against child labor? That refused to lobby government officials for their own gains?

What if every piece of food that entered your body was free from harmful pesticides and antibiotics that creates unmanageable species of bacterial infections? What if every banana you ate was collected by a worker that had enough wages to feed his family by working to feed yours?

What if you invested only in companies that had social and environmental sustainability as the forefront of their goals? What if the money in your mutual fund never got pocketed by Phillip Morris or Exxon Mobile, and instead went to breaking cycles of poverty in your local urban community?

I bring this up to charge myself: Where am I spending my money? And just like a vote in the mid-term elections, you vote for the way you want to see the world work when you take out your wallet. What will you vote for?

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Social Media: A little bit for a lot, or a lot for a little.

This week I've noticed social entreprenuership in the media, especially utilizing film to bring about individual and collective interest and ACTION with issues.

I've encountered organizations like Participant Media that put a lot of money into making "entertainment that inspires and compels social change". They've made movies such as An Inconvenient Truth and Food Inc. that with the participation of 178 non-profit partners have impacted an estimated 75 million viewers. Visitors to the website are presented with five things the viewer can change or do in their personal lives to take action on the social issue presented in the film.

MN Advocates for Human rights is showing and discussing (see October 20th event details here) the movie Born Into Brothels which is a film about prostitution in India co-produced by youth. The making of the film resulted in the formation of the Kids With Cameras organization which teaches photography to marginalized youth in order to make change. They encourage viewers of the academy award-winning film to host Born Into Brothel House parties so that people educate their family and friends regarding the reality of India and financially support Kids With Camera's current efforts to build a home for youth in Calcutta. A kind of "Pampered Chef Party" approach to fund and awareness-raising.

While grammy's and 75 million viewers are impressive, a wise women once told me "You can impact a lot people a little, or a little number of people a lot". My friend from St. Olaf in his trip to Calcutta recently shared that he was impacted a lot during his trip to India. He was impacted by the condition in which youth lived on the streets and made a documentary with the young women that founded Silent Voices. They are in the process of editing a documentary called Joy In Spite of It that will come out March 2011.

Another friend from St. Olaf successfully reminded her audience in her Media Studies senior show that media can be combined with other forms of art, like dance, in order to create social impact. Her dance about the portrayal of women in the media featured compelling media clips as the backdrop of a dahnce piece which is described on her senior studies website. Her senior project affected me and those that partook in the project greatly.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Life Giving

Bonfire yesterday: grilled chicken, pepper, mushrooms, japanese eggplant over a bonfire fueled by the wood of my old swingset. My mother joked that I was burning my childhood, watching it go up in flames. It could be it. But lately I've felt fresh and new, somewhat childlike, by the encouragement of those I love. This is a chance to thank each person in my life that has showed me what it is to be honest and open. To communicate instead of ignore. To get a bit messy, maybe yell or cry instead of letting a topic go. There is hope in those that seek to understand and seek to share.

My friends are people that ask how you are, and truly care. They modern dance. They tell embarrassing stories about pooping without toilet paper. They ride on the back of cars. They are hope.

I woke up this morning, and I was excited to go to work. There must be a pretty amazing God that set me up with this work. That is hope.

My mother and I went to bible study tonight where we explored the first chapter of Isaiah. The whole room of the church was packed with women interested in reading the bible. Each and every woman was placed in a discussion group where they will have the opportunity to talk about their lives, and share where they see God in this world. They are hope.

Where have you seen hope in your day?
Last week I was feeling discouraged and defeated after translating for detainee's in court for MN Advocates for Human Rights. My good friend has been working so hard at providing opportunities for justice in a system that I think is occasionally mis-named. She's volunteering a year in a program called Lutheran Volunteer Corps where she's committing to a year of sustainability, spirituality, and simplicity.  I was overwhelmed by all the issues that exist in our country which require attention from lawyers and judges, yet thankful that programs such as the MN Detention Project offered by The Advocates for Human Rights exists. I was also concerned about the issues that exist in foreign countries which result in visitors to this country to even leave their home and migrate. I lost sight of hope, and then there it was in an Oldsmobile car right next to me. A man whose skin was hung off his bones more than it clung. A man whose sunglasses were so large his nose fought to peek out. A man that had to be around for over 90 decades. That man was going somewhere. And he was driving. If he can get up in the morning and have something that he needs to do, something that motivates him to drive, I do too. He was hope.

And so many times in our lives it's difficult to find the hope. I find more often than not there's structures of desparity that strangle all signs of it. It's days like this that we must record and cherish and smile about. They may happen once a week. They may happen once a month, once a year, once every five. But they happen, and for these days we thank a God who created this big world in which we can live.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Why was this created?

As some of my closest friends are on the other side of the equator, and globe, there was a request that I blogged to keep them updated about life back on the home-front. This forum will be a place for me to process some of what I've been learning, and share a bit in order to generate conversation with friends and family. Feel free to check in as often or little as you like, and the goal is to hear from YOU! So please feel free to comment or email me if something grabs your attention!

Wishing you peace and joy!
JpK