Showing posts with label volunteer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label volunteer. Show all posts

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Giving back and trying not to give up

My place of employment offers it's employees a chance to give back to things they care about by donating money to groups that they volunteer their time with.  This year, for my particular area, this has been a pretty big focus point.  Because, although they are a behemoth and get a lot of bad press, they also do a lot of good.  For me that meant an opportunity to get a few more people involved in the JDRF Walk to Cure Diabetes.  I haven't pushed my fundraising at all this year, settling for a few Facebook posts and a collection jar at work, offering my co-workers a chance to see me in drag if the price is right.  So far, that's not looking like an incentive for them.  Who knew?!!  And yesterday we were lucky enough to have a radio station on site and a chance to sell some drinks and popcorn for donations.  The event was kind of dropped in my lap at the last minute with no real idea on direction or help with planning so it was a bit of a cluster (to put it lightly).  In the end I raised a whopping $10.50.  Go me!  As I sat there watching people walk by without a second glance I got a bit discouraged.  Thinking that if my table had a big pink ribbon on it and I was raising money for a more glamorous disease that more people would be stopping.  But then one of the parents who I had invited to speak came and I listened as the DJ for the radio station interviewed her.  She wasn't really sure what to say but she did such a great job explaining what it means to raise a T1 child and the devastation of the diagnosis brought to their family.  The money collected wasn't quite what I had hoped it would be.  But, that wasn't really what is about, even if it took me a bit to figure that out.  A year ago I was only able to get about 5 people from work on my walk team.  This year it should be more like 20.  A year ago I wouldn't have thought we would ever get a radio station out the help us spread the word.  Next year I'll have a better idea what will work and what won't for this type of thing and hopefully have a little more planning and organization into it.  Although I feel like I've stretched myself a little thin again taking on multiple time consuming volunteer opportunities I'm very glad that I'm doing it.  At the beginning of the year I said I was going to focus more on volunteering and less on fundraising and that's what I'm doing.  I'll likely not hit my goal for my team, but I'm meeting more people in the local T1D community and everytime I meet another parent of a child with diabetes I gain even more respect for them.  I am not thankful for many things that come with this disease, but I am thankful that I was diagnosed as an adult, not a child, because I don't know how my parents would have been able to take that on, and I'm thankful I have it and not my kids.  I don't think I could bear to see either of them go through this.  Walk day is less than a week away as the logistics chairperson it is going to be a whirlwind few days, but I am so thankful for the opportunity.

Although I believe my time and experience is more valuable than the money I could raise, every dollar helps, and if you'd like to donate to my team you can do so here.

Monday, May 12, 2014

DBlog Week- Change the World

Prior to being diagnosed with diabetes almost 3 years ago I felt compelled to give back to the community in some way but was not sure how I wanted to do that.  Post diagnosis I became involved with the ADA Community walks program. That was my first experience with volunteer work and with the diabetes community.  For two years I was the Volunteer Walk Coordinator for the Boise ADA Community Walk.  That experience awakened a passion in me.  A passion to donate my time towards raising money and awareness for people that experience what I do on daily basis.  That also led me to discovering Idaho Diabetes Youth Programs and Camp Hodia (last part of Idaho, first part of diabetes).  Like so many other camps across the country, Camp Hodia provides an opportunity for kids and teens with Type 1 diabetes to be around other kids their own age who are going through the same things as them.  When they go to camp they no longer feel like outsiders, they feel normal among other kids just like them.  Originally I thought about volunteering as a counselor but that wouldn't work with my current home and work schedule.  Then I was contacted about helping with a fundraiser for the camp.  This experience was one of the most rewarding of my life.  If the ADA walk ignited the fire in me for volunteering then this fundraiser fanned those flames. 
  
Not being diagnosed until I was 26 I never experienced camp.  But I do experience the isolation of diabetes and the feeling that no one gets it.  From the first meeting I felt like what I was doing was right, but it was not until the night of the event that those feelings really peaked and overflowed.  Seeing the hard work of our group come together for our event and seeing a room filled with generous people joining up to support kids with diabetes was overwhelming.  During the live auction portion of the fundraiser I stood at the front of the room and was in awe of the amount of money people were putting up for the cause that I had grown so passionate about in the months spent planning prior to that.  The 14 year old daughter of our fundraising committee leader, a PWD and camper herself, spoke towards the end of the auction.  She spoke about her diagnosis, about what life with diabetes was like for her, and what camp meant to her.  She talked about the feelings of isolation and being an outsider, having to count carbs, dose insulin, and constantly check her blood sugar while her peers went about living normal lives.  While I am in a much different place in my life than this young girl, I knew just what she was talking about because I experience those same feelings in my own life.  She went on to talk about how she looked forward to camp every year and being able to spend a week at a place where she felt normal and had friends who were the same as her and knew what she was going through.  As she spoke the tears welled up in my eyes.  The passion that I felt for this cause grew by leaps and bounds as I saw first hand the effect of the money I was helping to raise.

I had often heard and seen people volunteering their time and energy for causes that they believe in.  But until I experienced it first hand I never really understood what drove them to do that.  Their time could be spend doing so many things, but they chose to give it these organizations.  Our auction and gambling night for Camp Hodia raised over $44,000, over double the original $20,000 goal.  And did I mention that this was the first year the event had been held?  That fundraiser took place almost two weeks ago and I am still in a dreamlike state when I think about way it made me feel.  I am still in awe of what a few people working together toward a common goal can accomplish.  I still feel like telling every person that I might what we accomplished.  Some things I put my time into are a bit selfish in that they directly effect me or I benefit from the results.  Others, like Camp Hodia, I will never personally benefit from outside of the feelings of accomplishment and pride.  Either way, I encourage anyone who has a cause they are passionate about to get out and do whatever you are able to support it, you will not regret it.

You can find more information about Camp Hodia here