10.25.2006

BIG NEWS!

Well, much to our delight, we had an anonymous donor appear out of the blue today.
(A mask was disguising his or her identity of course)

This very generous donor will match all financial donations made between today (October 25) and the day we leave, up to the amount of $500. If you are interested in donating to our upcoming trip, now is the time!


In other news - yesterday we had the pleasure of receiving 21 boxes of Dial products at our apartment. Thank goodness for basement storage!Like our last trip to Jamaica, our friend who works at Dial generously donated cases of bar soap, hand sanitizer and other products. We are thrilled to be taking these "everyday essentials" for use at the infirmary.

As always, thanks for your continued interest and support. We hope you'll be able to take advantage of the dollar for dollar matching offered by our anonymous donor.

JamaicaNow Team 2006
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PLEASE NOTE: All payments through our website are managed by Ryan Lincoln. You will see his name appear throughout the transaction. Please indicate (during your transaction) if your payment should be assigned to a specific team member. You may also contact Ryan at ryanlincoln@post.harvard.edu if you have any questions about your payment.


10.12.2006

As the Jamaica trip approaches, fundraising continued on the sunny west coast with a "Shop in your friends' closets" event last weekend. On Saturday morning, a dozen girls showed up with their gently used, and in some cases, never worn, clothes and accessories to trade with friends new and old. We filled up four racks and two couches with everyone's items, and the home of our gracious hostess, Sheina, was transformed into a tres chic boutique!



After snacking on brunch, mimosas, and coffee, "shopping" and swapping started promptly at 11 a.m. With a fury that rivaled even the Nordstrom annual sale, the ladies set to work Visa free to find fun and funky new additions to their wardrobes. Everyone left with something they loved, and we literally shopped 'til we dropped. Best of all, the clothes left behind will go with Becky to be donated to the people of Harmons, Jamaica. In fact, we were doubly blessed in that we had so many items that some of the clothing will go to a local career closet to be donated to women getting a fresh start on life. Thanks again to everyone who participated!


Back in Boston, friends gathered at Jillian's for an evening of playing pool to help raise money to cover travel expenses but also supplies for the infirmary and its residents.
Not only was this "FUN"draising fun, but helped us get closer to meeting our financial goals!



For those of you who missed out on billiards, we will have a bowling fundraiser at Lucky Strike on November 2nd from 6-8 PM. Let us know if you want to come!

Thanks for all of your help!
JamaicaNow Team 2006


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PLEASE NOTE: All payments through our website are managed by Ryan Lincoln. You will see his name appear throughout the transaction. Please indicate (during your transaction) if your payment should be assigned to a specific team member. You may also contact Ryan at ryanlincoln@post.harvard.edu if you have any questions about your payment.

10.10.2006

"Do not wait for leaders; do it alone, person to person."
~ Mother Theresa


When I first realized that I was *really* going to spend my Thanksgiving holiday in rural Jamaica in 2004, I wasn't completely surprised, but I was certainly curious about how things would unfold. I'd heard many stories about previous trips, the most interesting and intriguing of which focused on the Clarendon/MayPen infirmary.

I had a hard time imagining what it would be like to spend a day at the infirmary and I admit that even *my* active imagination could not fully comprehend what lay before me. Hearing stories of poverty and disfiguration were somehow easier to bear from the comfort of my Cambridge apartment. So when our team's van pulled up to the infirmary and several residents listlessly wandered toward us volunteers, I tried to "manage my panic" - a motto one of my friends taught me while prepping for the GRE as part of my applications to Harvard Grad School of Education.

I was in the most destitute place I could imagine. The building, the people, and the task in front of me provided plenty of practice at managing my panic. I could strive for Harvard with zeal - why not this half-day visit to those who needed a visitor the most?

Our day began with a tour of the facility. The women's ward was our first stop and as we approached, we heard shrieking sounds. Our "tour guide" Leslie (now a Won by One staff member) paused for a moment to tell us that this was actually the sound of excitement caused by our arrival - someone was overjoyed that we'd soon be visiting with them one-on-one.

Leslie added very frankly that this was the sort of thing which might have scared her off in prior years, but she had come to realize that it just meant someone was happy we'd shown up. It was a change in perspective I needed to hear and clung to for the remainder of the day.

Throughout my afternoon at the infirmary I did my best to serve and visit with residents, but it was difficult. Without medical expertise I was sent to roam the infirmary to visit with the residents - trying to be hopeful and share hope, but without much direction my energy was quickly dwindling.

I made my way to a bed where a woman lay, paralyzed from the waist down. I introduced myself as our medical staff finished her check-up and thus I met Pearl, one of the most well-known residents at the infirmary. Pearl has been living at the infirmary for a number of years after becoming paralyzed, yet her determination and kind spirit ignite passion, leaving indelible prints upon the heart and soul. After a lengthy visit and a sad farewell, our team left the infirmary, and I treasured those moments we'd had together.

Two years have passed, but my long conversation with Pearl has rarely left my mind. Upon returning to Boston just days after meeting Pearl I woke, again in the comfort of my home, wondering what she would be doing that day.

It was simple enough to imagine the hours spent lying in her bed, a view of the small yard and other infirmary buildings outside the window. Pearl, unlike any of the other residents has a small CD player which she operates using a long thin stick, carefully manipulating the stick with her fingers to select the buttons.

I imagined her listening to one of her CDs (country music is a favorite) and asking an orderly to open her small envelope of photos sent by various visitors who've passed by her bed and conversed with her much like me. The photos are a treasure and a reminder that someone far away is thinking of her.

I keep a photo taken of Pearl and me on my desk at work and the result is that she is never far from my thoughts. Truth be told, she has often consumed my attention during a workday, and I jump at the chance to tell people about her when they notice the framed photo.

I keep the photo as a reminder that there is work to be done at the infirmary, work that may eventually change the way Pearl lives out her remaining days. I had always admired Mother Theresa for enduring a life of poverty with the outcasts of society, but her work and passion had never made sense to me.

Why would someone leave all comforts behind to serve and live with the most destitute? After meeting Pearl and spending just those few hours at the infirmary, I realized that the residents of the infirmary are not so different from you or me - all of us are destitute in one way or another. The difference is that we can hide our areas of destitution better than Pearl and those who live at the infirmary, and the comforts of our lives help us to hide things very well.

My personal draw to serving those at the infirmary stems from seeing the effects of neglect, physical pain, and touching with my own hand the face of those who must endure such difficulties. While I knew that such destitution existed before I went to the infirmary, I am now even more responsible than before to seek change and the restoration of dignity. However, I am no longer waiting for leaders to ask for my service, but serving on my own initiative.

As with many cases of injustice around the world, we may not all see the acts first-hand. But as members of a global society, we are responsible for our actions (or lack of action) and to facilitate change where needed. As I return to Jamaica in just over a month, I hope to follow through on what Mother Theresa encouraged, it is time to work for change in small ways - person to person.

After a single day at the infirmary and my meeting with Pearl, the work of Mother Theresa has never been the same in my mind. Her work is an example which shifts the responsibility to care for and empower the powerless - the accountability to act is now ours.


Liz
JamaicaNow Team 2006

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PLEASE NOTE: All payments through our website are managed by Ryan Lincoln. You will see his name appear throughout the transaction. Please indicate (during your transaction) if your payment should be assigned to a specific team member. You may also contact Ryan at ryanlincoln@post.harvard.edu if you have any questions about your payment.

10.03.2006



Our Crew

Massachusetts
BACK (left to right): Silvia and Mary Frances
FRONT (left to right): Liz, Ryan, and Nate

California
Becky

Becky Blevins
Becky Blevins grew up in Arizona, but is a California local these days. She moved to the San Francisco Bay Area to attend Stanford University and to pitch softball for their first women's team. Becky has worked for Hewlett Packard since 1999 and is currently (in addition tofull timee work) pursuing her MBA at Santa Clara University.

When Becky was recruited to join the trip to Jamaica, she was in the midst of taking a course on Social Benefit Entrepreneurship. The trip and the
"needs assessment" seemed like the perfect opportunity to serve using the new skills she had just acquired and the learning she had experienced in school. Becky looks forward to completing her MBA for all the obvious reasons, but also because she looks forward to being an agent of change by acting on her beliefs about service and humanitarian work as well as using business/corporate opportunities to make a positive impact on the world.

Silvia De la Guardia
Silvia was born and raised in Guatemala city and at the age of 11, moved to the U.S. with her family. After a short stint in New Orleans, they relocated to Miami -– the place she now “calls home.

Sivlia stays “on the go” as a travel nurse working in the E.R. for a couple of months at a time in different cities. She has been in Boston for almost 6 months now and will soon return to Miami before moving on to her next station.

Silvia has made international volunteer work a part of her life and volunteers at least once each year to serve those in need. Having never been to Jamaica she is looking forward to adding to the number of Jamaican friends she currently has and working with a new population and putting her talents to work!

Mary Frances Giles
Mary Frances hails from the "new New York" otherwise known as Chattanooga, Tennessee. She is a southern belle in many respects but has certainly learned to hold her own "“up North" and her accent (despite her grandmother'’s protestations) is still there.

Mary Frances has worked for many years as a speech - language pathologist and in the last year has made the transition to working for a non-profit organization called the Bolivian Street Children Project (BSCP) based here in Boston. Mary Frances has spent time volunteering with street children in Bolivia and now serves them in a professional capacity as the Director of Development at BSCP.

During her time in Jamaica she is looking forward to furthering her understanding of world poverty and the needs of developing countries, especially as it relates to her work with the Bolivian Street Children Project.

Liz Hawkins Lincoln
Liz grew up in Montana and eventually became another one of California's "Bay Area transplants"” to teach elementary school. After five years of work in education-related fields she moved to Boston where she now resides. Lizfull timely works fulltime at Harvard Graduate School of Education and, like Becky is also pursuing a graduate degree part-time.

Her first trip to Jamaica was during Thanksgiving week 2004 with the original medical team (sponsored by Won by One) service project. Her passion for those living at the May Pen/Clarendon Infirmary and desire to serve the less fortunate have greatly influenced her involvement (and recruitment of others) on this upcoming trip. Liz and Ryan married last year in August and look forward to many years of serving Jamaicans together.

Ryan Lincoln
Ryan is originally from Kansas City Missouri and has the most experience of those on our team when it comes to serving in Jamaica.He moved to Boston for a Masters program in theological studies, and after graduating has been working at Harvard Divinity School for the past 2 years. The fall has been a busy one for him. In addition to preparing for the upcoming Jamaica trip, he is busy preparing applications for PhD programs in the sociology of religion.

Nathan Pelsma

Nate too hails from the Kansas City region, though he's from the western side of the border. He grew up in Lawrence KS and attended the University of Kansas before moving to Boston to work at City Year. He has extensive experience in the non-profit sector planning service events around the nation, and coordinating corporate sponsorship with non-profit organizations. In addition to bringing these credentials to the Jamaica team, he'll bring many new skills that he's learning in his new role as an MBA student at Boston College.




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PLEASE NOTE: All payments through our website are managed by Ryan Lincoln. You will see his name appear throughout the transaction. Please indicate (during your transaction) if your payment should be assigned to a specific team member. You may also contact Ryan at ryanlincoln@post.harvard.edu if you have any questions about your payment.