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Tucson Swap-O-Rama 3/12

Are you in the Tucson area the weekend of March 12th? Yes? Alrighty then. Get whatever gizmo you use to keep track of all that scheduling and type/write this down:

Saturday, March 12th
10am – 12pm
Swap-O-Rama
A Children’s Clothing Exchange and Diaper Drive

to benefit
Diaper Bank of Arizona.

Geneva Hall, St. Mark’s Presbyterian Church
3809 East 3rd St.

Check out the Eventbrite page or the facebook page for the important details.

HAMO- AZ is partnering with a local preschool, St. Marks, to raise awareness and diapers, and to have a whole lot of fun. The event is inspired by the Tucson Mama Kid’s Clothing Swap of 2009. I should also mention that the Tucson Mama’s exchange inspired the Bay Area folk of Help a Mother Out last February to do the same thing to great success. Additional bonus: Tucson Mama is going to be joining us at Swap-O-Rama to lend her support and her cool factor to the whole shebang. I’m also excited to add that a wonderful local photographer, Melissa Haun, who has been a fabulous supporter in the past of our diaper drives, has volunteered her services to document the event.

Those from outside Tucson wondering on how you can get in on the whole cool diaper drive action? Check out Help A Mother Out’s suggestions here.

Photo courtesy of Julie Michelle

Thanks to the HealthTap Community for Raising 14,000 Diapers!!!

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” ~ Margaret Mead

Remember that awesome health and technology start up that wanted to do a diaper drive for us for New Years? Well, the HealthTap community really came through for our babies, to the tune of 14,000 diapers! Big hugs and shout out also goes out to everyone at EcoMom.com for matching donations through their website. You can’t really tell from the picture above, but the 14,000 (++) diapers are behind the group.

HealthTap’s efforts mean there’s a brand new diaper pantry for our distribution partners at the social services department over at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford, where they now have enough diapers to address diaper need for their most under-served homeless and low income families. Because the HealthTap drive exceeded their initial (and ambitious!) goal of 10,000 diapers, both Packard Hospital and HealthTap agreed it made perfect sense to share the surplus diapers with two additional HAMO partner agencies, Baby Basics of the Peninsula and Youth and Family Enrichment Services, both of which are also based on the Peninsula, serving families in East Palo Alto/Menlo Park.


Pictured above: Kim (Baby Basics), Lisa M. (YPES), Kimmy (HealthTap), Yours Truly, Kimberly P. (EcoMom.com), and Kelley (Packard Hospital).

I want to send a heartfelt thank you to everyone in the HealthTap community who contributed to this drive. Not only did HealthTap employees personally donate a generous amount of diapers, but they amplified their effort by engaging their personal networks in the drive.

Each person, whether they donated a pack of diapers, or several cases of them, made an investment in the families who will benefit from the diapers raised. What does it really mean? Benefiting families will have supplemental diapers at a time when they may be dealing with a health, personal, or financial crisis. It means less diaper rash, less caregiver stress, and more happy bottoms.

Now THAT is something to write home about…

Photos courtesy of HealthTap

@HealthTap To Help A Mother Out With A Diaper Pantry #hamo

Last week, right after the Glendale Drive ended, we got an unexpected email from a health technology company, HealthTap, interested in hosting a small holiday diaper drive for us at their office. Yes! We’re grateful whenever anyone wants to give us diapers!

Well, that could have been the end of the story, but of course, things have a way of happening especially during the holidays.

As I was talking with Kimmy at HealthTap I mentioned that one of our wishes for the new year was to start a diaper pantry that could become a reliable resource for the social services department over at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford.


Weeks ago we received a request from the family resource coordinator over at Packard Children’s Hospital. They were interested in becoming a recipient partner agency since most of the folks who pass through their department are typically under-served families who struggle to provide basic needs for their children, including an adequate supply of diapers.

Some examples of families who come through their doors: local homeless or low income families who are uninsured or under-insured; newly discharged low income mothers and newborn babies; even out of area families, from all walks of life, who stay at Ronald McDonald House while they receive out patient services at the hospital (interesting fact: young recipients of kidney transplants need diapers after being discharged).

These stories basically lit a fire with everyone at HealthTap and they pretty much immediately committed to helping HAMO build this diaper pantry. The next day I learned they already had 1000 diapers underneath their office Christmas tree and were in the midst of sending out a call to action to their network.

HealthTap’s goal is 10,000 diapers by New Years Eve.

It’s an ambitious goal, but believe me when I tell you our ambitious friends are FIRED UP to make it happen.

Won’t you help them help a mother out?

Peninsula/Silicon Valley locals YOU CAN HELP!

This endeavor will mean the world of difference to struggling families on the Peninsula and will make a huge impact this coming year on the health of local children, through Packard Children’s Hospital and beyond! This is not something HAMO would be able to do on our own within such a short period of time and we’re elated the HealthTap community has risen to the challenge.

p.s. Mamas, you may be interested to know that Dr. Greene, yes – that Dr. Greene, is on their team!). Oh yeah, full disclosure here – this is NOT a sponsored post! As my household’s self-appointed chief medical officer, I’m interested in learning more about HealthTap’s vision and simply grateful they reached out to help us build the diaper pantry.

Bottoms Covered #ELB

We had an incredible community event on Wednesday June 30th, which we put together to celebrate our Every Little Bottom donation from Huggies.

Pictured above is one of our youngest volunteers handing out diapers to Mel S. from WDDC, one of our FIRST partner agencies. Mel is the volunteer coordinator whom we met a little over a year ago. WDDC took 50 cases of diapers on Wednesday. I think they’ll be able to give out more than 6 diapers per mom now.

We had about 8 agencies come by to celebrate the momentous occasion with us. The energy was amazing and everyone pitched it to do their share. It was… very grassroots.

Some of our original agencies were able to come and bring back truck and van loads of diapers (all large sizes!) to stock their shelves for the hot summer months. Moms loaded up their station wagons full of diapers to bring to more agencies.


Photo credit: Wendy Copley (http://wendolonia.com/blog/)

Whitney rallied her crew to join in and keep the diapers moving. Please note the crutches (She broke her foot a few days prior and still drove over to lend a hand!).

Wendy and her son W. came over to help load diapers and document the day. We loaded up her car with diapers to bring back to an east bay agency. Mike and his daughter E. came by and got down to business with the pallet jack. It was so great to see our youngest volunteers really wanting to be there “to help the babies.”

My friend Del helped organize the event and Steve just totally brought it together and made a lot of behind the scenes happen.

We are totally, we mean Totally, indebted to our friends at City-Core Development for donating space to house the diaper donation. Are you looking for office space to lease? Check them out and tell them we sent you 

At the distribution I had a great conversation with a social worker from a newer partner agency on the  peninsula. We were talking about how so many of her clients are struggling with the basics. Parents are working long hours and it literally comes down to paying the utility bill, putting food on the table, or keeping an adequate supply of diapers. She talked about how when she has diapers, which is not too frequent, she can give them to her clients and then they can focus on more solving more pressing issues.

It felt completely awesome to load up the social worker’s car with diapers for her clients. My hope is that we can figure out a way to continue the momentum this windfall donation helped start.

Big Hugs to Huggies for literally covering a whole lot of little bottoms the Bay Area this week. We’re having an amazing time bringing your diapers to moms who really need them!

Check out Wendy’s photos from the day:http://www.flickr.com/photos/wendycopley/sets/72157624272058027/

Learn, Knit, Give

Inspired by the event that started it all, the Tucson contingent of Help A Mother Out organized a Learn-to-Knit Party Fundraiser for the Diaper Bank of Southern Arizona.

On a warm May day in Tucson (most of them are) a motley, but enthusiastic group gathered to try their hand at this time honored craft. Our regional non-profit hospital, Tucson Medical Center, provided not only a fine setting, but also the yarn and needles meaning all donations went to the Diaper Bank.

Along with enough donations to purchase 2,700 size 4 diapers, a whole bunch of awareness, ideas and volunteers for future events were raised as a result of this event.
In the works as a direct result of this event:

A learn-to-crochet party for Fall
A karaoke party (one pack of diapers to enter, another if you refuse to sing)
Diaper drives at local schools and university departments
Diaper drive at Cinema La Placita

Along with TMC’s support, the following generously supplied fabulous door prizes:
Velvet Glass
Kiwi Knitting
Sparkle and Charm
Hillary Rosenfeld LMT
Erin Debenport

Many thanks all!

Nowhere To Go With Her Four Month Old Baby

This is a true story from our friends at Homeless Prenatal Program (HPP) in San Francisco.  Diapers and other hygiene items are one of the highest needs for families in transition.


HPP Staff with HAMO diapers - May 2009

Yesterday I met with a 38 year old mother of a 4 month old baby.  She was staying with friends and just became homeless because they received an eviction notice.  She didn’t have anywhere to go with her baby when she came to HPP and only had a diaper bag full of things for the baby.  She desperately needed diapers and wipes for the baby, especially since she didn’t even know where she was going to be for the next few days.  We were able to give her diapers and it just relieved one small worry (not really small but in comparison with her other worries).  This is an extreme situation but so many times clients have to leave where they are staying suddenly and cannnot always take necessary survival items with them.  When they come to HPP for help and need diapers it is very important that we can help them with this as babies can’t wait for a few days for things to settle down to get their diapers changed!

As I mentioned yesterday on Twitter,  except for newborn sizes – we are out of diapers.  Help us fill a room of diapers for HPP, et al. in May!  If you are near San Francisco, come to our benefit party this Sunday. If you can’t make it, you can participate by collecting diapers and donating in person (Bay Area) or via our virtual diaper drive.


On a related note: we had some great blog coverage yesterday. In case you missed:

Genie wrote about our May campaign on BlogHer.

Whitney invited all the Rookie Moms to our SF party.

Kim talks about how we are all crazy.

And our friends at Event Brite profiled us on their blog.

Tucson Mama’s sidekick  talks about Mother’s Day karma.

The Baby Boy Wears a Size 5: A Story from San Francisco’s Bayview

The other day I had the privilege to attend a private screening of a new short documentary film about our newest partner, the Bayview Mission. It was wonderful to see old friends and meet new ones, and learn more about the mission’s work.

For San Franciscans who don’t know, the Bayview Mission is a ministry started in 2004 by the Reverend Nina Pickerrell, and her many devoted volunteers at Grace Cathedral, the beautiful church and landmark on top of California Street. The mission is literally a beacon of hope inside the Bayview district, creating community through the food pantry that distributes every Monday afternoon. They supplement basic human needs and other supplies (groceries – including fresh produce!, clothing, school supplies, children’s books, and toiletries) to working families, the homeless, as well as any Bayview resident that comes to them in need of help.

And one of their highest needs is….diapers.

The Bayview/Hunter’s Point district of San Francisco is known as one of the most dangerous neighborhoods in California. For years, Bayview’s residents have been marginalized – both economically, and geographically from the rest of San Francisco. There are Bayview has the highest density of children in all of San Francisco, a 50-percent poverty rate, high levels of gang violence, has more liquor stores than grocery stores, and is predominately African-American.

The local Walgreens locks up diapers and formula.

Every Monday when the mission opens for food distribution, there are about 40 families who come to them and have a child in diapers. Diapers are in scarce supply at the mission. So much of an unmet need that, up until recently, they have only been able to distribute diapers once a month.

Nina and the mission’s volunteers told me story about a mom that usually comes to them on Mondays. She has a young child, as well as a 6 month old baby boy. Because she believes that larger sized diapers hold more, and therefore, are cheaper in cost, she puts the baby boy in size 5, even though he really fits a size 3. The baby is six months old and is still wearing newborn clothes, because the mother doesn’t have bigger clothes for him to wear. So his clothes are too tight, and he stays in the Size 5 diaper longer than he probably should.

It warmed my heart to hear that because of our very first diaper donation to the Bayview Mission, this baby boy got some of the perfect size of diapers when he came the next Monday.

And yet.

It also made me very sad to hear, the same story we hear time and again, that there are children, just like this baby boy, who go without something so basic as a diaper – here within the city limits of one of the most beautiful and affluent regions in the country.

SF Bay locals: You can help us continue this work by coming to support our event on May 2nd at Peekadoodle and/or pledging to host a drive in May. Please pass it on!

Meet La Tanya

Part of what we hope to do this year is bring you guys closer to the folks who are benefiting from all the diapers you raise. Back in December I received a desperate email from a social worker by the name of La Tanya.

La Tanya found us by chance.  She picked up Parent’s Press, and saw our mention in it. She works with homeless families at the Center for the Vulnerable Child (CVC), run by Children’s Hospital of Oakland (CHO). You wouldn’t believe the lengths she has gone to obtain diapers. If you were in a situation where you needed a social worker, you’d want someone just like her.

So a few days before Christmas, with my car loaded with diapers,  I went to visit La Tanya to learn more about the families the CVC serves.

What is a vulnerable child?

According to CVC, vulnerable children live in environments that may put them at risk for social, educational, physical, or mental health problems. Families facing poverty, unstable housing or substance abuse are just a few examples of vulnerable populations. They include homeless children, families in transition, and foster children.

CVC serves about 450 families annually all over the East Bay including Oakland, Berkeley, and Richmond. They even serve foster children who are living as far away as Stockton, since Medi-Cal rules dictate children must continue to receive care (e.g., go to the doctor, see a mental health therapist) in the county they originated from.

As it is with many social workers, diapers are like gold for La Tanya. In the past, she has had to rely on the kindness of personal friends who send gift cards so that she can purchase diapers for her clients. Diapers are so expensive in the Oakland inner city that in the past she has gone to the big box store to personally purchase diapers for her clients.

Some clients have admitted to her they sell their food stamps so they can afford diapers. Some of her clients have collected aluminum cans to redeem for money to purchase diapers and other hygiene needs. Some clients have admitted to reusing diapers. Many clients are reluctant to even talk about their need for diapers, because they fear agencies like Child Protective Services will take their children away. They are so scared, in fact, that they will neglect to mention it when they come to see the doctor at the free medical clinic.

When she doesn’t have diapers, La Tanya sends her families across town by bus. In west Oakland,  St. Vincent de Paul’s distributes TWO diapers.

We’ve been able to make additional donations to the  CVC due to the support from all of you guys. La Tanya and everyone at the CVC now have supplemental diapers they can give families who are struggling.

Big shout out to our Bay Area contributor, Janice, who has been managing the newest donation point at the Nurture Center in Lafayette and helping to shuttle diapers to places like CVC and WDDC! Thanks Janice!

Carolyn’s Thoughts on a Monday, Cook for the WDDC

We wanted to share a little glimmer of hope that many of you have had a big part of. This is a guest post from WDDC’s Monday cook, Carolyn.

***


Photo credit: www.sistersproject.org

I often wish news agencies would publish more hopeful, positive articles in this era of, more often than not, bad news. So I thought I’d give a shout out to those folk who quietly make the world a better place. I cook lunch every week at a women’s shelter (Women’s Day-time Drop in Center in Berkeley). This center is located in a small house next door to a playground and staff by some of the kindest and dedicated folks.

Here’s a snapshot of my Mondays.

As I peel carrots or slice bread in preparation for lunch I’m in awe of all the folks who make that possible. My kitchen partner, Sandy, who’s showed me the ropes with her 15 years of weekly volunteer experience at the shelter, Then there’s the 91 year-old gent who picks up leftover bread from local bakeries and drops it off. We smile when we see him as he’s spry and in his vision of a perfect society he’d like to “put us out of business” as he hopes there would be no need for homeless shelters. Amy stops by each week with produce from her garden so I can put fresh chard in a frittata and than there’s Victor who bring us extras—pasta from Chez Panisse or tomatoes from the Farmer’s market. David, a general contractor showed up yesterday to rebuild the bookcases and put shelves in the storage shed and Wendy leads a craft session each week with the ladies. I love the smiles on the client’s faces as they show off a necklace or earrings they just made. Lisa and Rachel show up with diapers, toiletries and school supplies as they are running a back-to-school drive through a website they have created (helpamotherout.org) So when the world news gets me I look forward to my Mondays.

– Carolyn Weil, Monday cook for the WDDC

By donating diapers to our campaign you are directly supporting our partners like WDDC. Together we’ve made a difference Bay Area and beyond. Thank you for being a part of this.

Happy Holidays to you and yours.

Baby, it’s cold outside: Share some warmth

This is a cross post from our friend Rebecca Freed of Becca’s Blog. Becca and her partner were the host of last spring’s Learn to knit party, where Rachel F. and I first learned about WDDC, which was pivotal in the evolution of HAMO. If you are an East Bay local, please see if you can help.

Photo credit: www.sistersproject.org

Right now, when we’re having the lowest temperatures of the year and wet weather to boot, the clients of the Women’s Daytime Drop-in Center could really use your help.

The Drop-in Center needs warm clothes for women and kids, including rain ponchos and coats, umbrellas, socks, hats and gloves.

The center, which has served Berkeley’s homeless and low-income women
and children for over 20 years, provides breakfast and lunch on weekdays, along with support groups, referrals to social services, and a children’s program. The center always needs toiletries to provide to clients, including toothpaste and deodorant.  Diapers, especially for toddlers, are also an ongoing need. An easy way to donate diapers is through the center’s Amazon wish list.

Photo credit: www.sistersproject.org

The center hosts a holiday party for clients as well. You can donate
gifts for women and kids, especially older kids, or even volunteer to
help put on the party. To arrange for a donation, contact the center
by phone (510-548-2884) or e-mail (staff@womensdropin.org).

Do I have an Opportunity for You! {Plus Book Giveaway}

A few years back I found myself sitting next to a fellow University employee on an airplane bound for some cold Mid-western city.

“So what do you do for the University?” I asked.

“I’m in development.” said he.

Not knowing any better I assumed he meant some sort of international studies program, but no, he meant fundraising.

“So you ask people for money?”

“No, I offer opportunities.”

Apparently development is all about opportunities. Opportunities to connect, opportunities to educate and be educated, opportunities to share your love of learning and tell your ungrateful children that they’re out of luck when it comes that ton of money you’ve stashed away in Swiss bank accounts.  I think the development folks are on to something.

I don’t have any money stashed away in Swiss bank accounts, but I have a healthy dose of passion concerning the injustices to the most vulnerable among us and perhaps a little verbal diarrhea. Microphilanthropy, of the sort Help A Mother Out is involved in, is putting such qualities to good use.

A couple of weeks ago I challenged my friends on Facebook in Help A Mother Out style. My daughter had garnered $150 in pledges for her first philanthropic event, Diaper Bank of Southern Arizona’sfirst Stroll & Roll. Could my friends help me match my daughter’s pledges?

In one week, after daily Facebook status updates on the state of the challenge and a promise/threat to wear a bumblebee outfit in broad daylight in a highly public place, we had raised over $400, and if the rest of the pledges come in, nearly $500. Now, my friends don’t have a bunch of money, but $10 here and $5 there, adds up.  At the end of the challenge week and after the Stroll & Roll I posted the picture my daughter and I in our costumes to Facebook so they could all have a good laugh. The $400 will cover one baby’s bottom in a healthy change of diapers for four months. It isn’t huge in the grand scheme of things, but to some family or families out there $400+ worth of diapers is going to make a huge difference. I wasn’t so much asking for money as giving my friends the opportunity to take part in a competition and have a bit of a laugh at my expense and all using Facebook.

In a similar manner, my friend Julie over at TucsonMama threw together what we hope will be the first in a biannual  kids’ clothing exchange at a local Tucson art gallery. The admittance to the exchange, five items of clean, nice kids’ clothing, and something for the Diaper Bank of Southern Arizona. In return participants had opportunity to enjoy a few mimosas and some snackages, pick out some ‘new to them’ kid clothes, partake in some cool conversation with friends and newly found friends and all the while helping the Diaper Bank. This isn’t asking people for money, or even donations, it is providing opportunities.

With this in mind I’d like to ask what is the most engaging micro-philanthropic event you’ve been involved in? How did it raise awareness and response? What was the opportunity offered? Please leave a comment with the details.

Book Giveaway: Max and the Diaper Fairy


Given the general gist of this post it is only fitting that it be paired with an opportunity, not only to impart your wisdom, but also to win a signed copy of the new bookMax and the Diaper Fairy by Melissa Hart. It is a sweet picture book about potty training a reluctant toddler. Contained within its pages not only a message about potty training, but also a message about supporting diaper banks.  So get those comments rolling, it can be something really small.

Hungry Kids Are Perfectly Healthy, So Let Them Eat Cake

A couple of recent studies about hunger in America have put hunger issues in the spotlight.  Onestudy in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine shows that nearly half of all U.S. children, and 90% of black children, will receive Food Stamps at some point during their childhood.   A November 16, 2009 report from the USDA showed that the number of Americans experiencing hunger is at the highest rate in 14 years.


The most shocking thing that I read about hunger this week was not the statistics in these reports: it was this comment made by Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation in this USA Today article about childhood hunger.

“There’s no evidence that even consistent poverty in the U.S. produces a nutritional risk,” he says, noting that rich and poor children tend to have about the same intake of protein, vitamins and minerals.

It is shocking to know that there are people who believe that there is no link between poverty and nutrition.   Studies from the Food Research and Action Center, Zero to Three, the Tufts University Center on Hunger, Poverty and Nutrition Policy, and the Centers for Disease Control have shown that childhood hunger leads to health problems, school absenteeism, stunted growth, reduced ability to learn, cognitive deficits, and emotional problems.

Anti-hunger programs that promote nutrition — the School Breakfast and School Lunch programs, the WIC program, the Summer Food Service program, the After-school Snack and Meal Program, the Child and Adult Care Food Program — must be strengthened.   Child nutrition programs are being reauthorized by congress.  The re-authorization process allows Congress to strengthen these programs so that they can help all hungry children in the U.S.

If you’d like to learn more about what’s at stake for Californians in the child nutrition re-authorization process, check out this fact sheet from California Food Policy Advocates. If you would like to contact President Obama, your Senator, or your Congressional Representative about child nutrition re-authorization, visit Feeding America’s Hunger Action Center.

Tucson Mamas! Come out for Stroll and Roll!

This is a cross post from our gal Rachel M. who also contributes over at Tucson Mama. If you are local, join the Tucson Mama/Help A Mother Out group and stroll together! RSVP via Facebook or by contacting Rachel M. directly.

We have a soft spot for the Diaper Bank of Southern Arizona here at Tucson Mama. This is an amazing organization addressing a need that our social safety net does not. Diapers, wipes, sanitary pads and tampons are not luxury items and the demand is ever higher for them as more Tucson families feel the pinch. With this in mind mark your calendar on November 14th for a fun event:

Pop your child (or children) in the carrier or pram, put on a pair of sneakers and join us for a 2 mile stroll around Reid Park to benefit the Diaper Bank of Southern Arizona.

The Diaper Bank’s First Annual Stroll & Roll starts with registration at 8am (Reid Park Ramada 31 – near Hi Corbett Field) and the walk begins at 9am. There will be refreshments, live music and family fun after the walk. Get this, registered walkers will get into Reid Park Zoo for free!

If you’re interested in being part of a Tucsonmama/Help A Mother Out Team let me know via diaperdrive at gmail dot com or my regular email if you know that
Registration is $25 for each adult and $5 for each child over three. Each participant (adult & child) will receive a free t-shirt if registered by October 30th.

Tucson Mama Sidekick – Rachel M.

The Diaper Bank of Southern Arizona is one of our diaper bank network partners. You can also donate diapers directly online via theirAmazon.com wishlist.

Cheeks Be With You!

Thank you to all of our Give Cheeks a Chance! supporters. Because of YOU, we collected over 35,000 diapers/pull ups for homeless and low income Bay Area babies. Prior to Give Cheeks a Chance! our diaper count was 25,680. It is now 61,222!

Big thank you to Sarah Gibbs, our San Jose Chapter Manager, for all that she did behind the scenes to make this effort a success in the South Bay.  Sarah especially kept busy connecting with goodie bag sponsors as well as shuttling diapers all around the South Bay. She is amazing. You should all buy her a drink.

Special shout outs to the following contributors, supporters, and mini drive hosts who made a difference in this effort:

Steve Walker & Holt Hinshaw

Karen Poznansky & Baby Buzz

Sue Older, Leah Ackerman-Hurst & SadieDeys Cafe staff

Shelby Shankland & Natural Resources

Patty Fisher at the San Jose Mercury News

Dana Lardner & Whimsical Walney

M. Felicity Chapman & Cubes and Crayons

Employees at Cisco Systems

Whitney Moss & RookieMoms.com

CJ BrasielJanet Fouts, Kathy & Dan Gibbs, Janice Hui, Khin Thomson, Diane Canepa, & Becca Freed


Here is some of what we collectively accomplished since late August:

  • All 22 babies staying at San Jose Family Shelter are diapered by HAMO.
  • SHCS case workers bring HAMO diapers to the neediest families (our diapers go directly to the case workers diaper closet!).
  • HPP and WDDC are able to supply emergency diapers to their homeless and low income clients. This especially helps at the end of the month when money is tight, as well as for families who have multiple children in diapers and/or who are currently living in homeless shelters.
  • Due to a large donation of “big kid” diapers, a WDDC client will have about two weeks supply of diapers for her child with special needs.
  • Due to the successful kick off event in the South Bay, we were able to make a one time diaper donation to Next Door Solutions.
  • APA Family Support Services distributed diapers to their families for the FIRST TIME EVER this past month.
  • Support Network for Battered Women will not have to send their clients across town by bus to get emergency diapers.
  • All 23 babies currently staying at Asian Women’s Home are all diapered by HAMO. Additionally, non-residential clients may also benefit from our diapers.

Thank you so much for taking direct action and making a difference. We could not have accomplished anything without the grassroots support in San Francisco, Santa Clara, Alameda, and Contra Costa counties.

If we build, will they come?

We could really use your help in getting the word out about Shelter Network of San Mateo county (click for wishlist), Children’s Network of Solano county (click for wishlist), and St. John’s Shelter in Sacramento county (click here for wishlist). If you know any local moms and families who would like to make a difference in these communities, please tell them about us and how easy it is to contribute via our Virtual Diaper Drive.

Contact us anytime of the year: info (at) helpamotherout (dotorg) to host a diaper drive for any of our partners. Here is our diaper drive toolkit to help you get started.

Remember: Be sure to add our gift card offer to your holiday wishlist this year!  Check back soon for details.

We’re Gettin’ Cheeky

Photo credit: Whimsical Walney

Our kick off events last week went off with a big bang. Baby Buzz and SadieDey’s Cafe were both hoppin’ with folks who came out to support the cause.  We collected over 5,000 diapers, South Bay and East Bay combined. Additionally, mini-diaper drives are currently underway with various moms groups, local businesses, and individuals. BIG THANK YOU to all came out to kick off Give Cheeks a Chance! Together we are making this month count in the lives of homeless and low income families.

There is still time to contribute! Drop off or donate online by September 30, 2009.

Partners in attendance:

Asian Women’s Home (AACI)Brighter BeginningsWDDCHomeless Prenatal ProgramSacred Heart Community ServiceSan Jose Family ShelterSt. Anthony’s Foundation

Gift bag and raffle sponsors:

Baby Buzz

SadieDeys Cafe

Orchard Supply Hardware

Method

Festoon Salon, Karen Jones

Barefoot and Pregnant

Bath By Bettijo

Mothering Rocks

Little Lamb Design

Diaper Shops

Baby Legs

Sketchers Kids

Puma Kids

Cubes & Crayons, Outside the Cube

Beadzilla

Fog City Charms

Send Out Cards

Motherhood to Otherhood

Align The Self

San Jose Family Shelter

Valley Credit Union

Emmy L Noble at Joyful Waters

Menacing Pickle

Off Ramp Publishing

CJBrasiel

Janet Fouts

Knitting as Public Service

Photo via Becca

Today’s guest post is from Becca Freed, who was there for the birth of Help a Mother Out, even if she (and we) didn’t know it at the time. As she describes below, this past spring Becca organized a learn-to-knit benefit party for the Women’s Daytime Drop-In Center, which both Lisa and I attended. With apologies to Becca — who was a thoughtful, extremely patient instructor — for us the most salient lesson of the day was about the crucial work done by the WDDC, and about their urgent needs. That day, everything clicked, and a few days later, Lisa and I started sketching out a plan for a Mother’s Day diapers-and-wipes donation drive, newly dubbed Help a Mother Out. We may not have quite gotten the hang of knitting yet, but only because we’ve been too busy trying to make good on the connections and inspiration we got that day.

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Some knitters seem to think there is no problem that can’t be solved by knitting something. Whether it’s for servicepeople deployed to combat zones or a neighbor who’s lost everything in a house fire, a certain type of knitter will always leap into the breach and organize a drive to knit socks or a cozy blanket or a prayer shawl.

I’ve been knitting and crocheting since childhood, and don’t get me wrong–I’ve done my fair share of charity needlecraft, starting with granny-square lap robes for my local nursing home when I was in junior high. I just don’t think that knitting is the right response for every problem. For one thing, it’s slow. Do you know how long it takes to knit even a preemie cap? If handknits were really the solution to a problem, there would be a serious imbalance between supply and demand. That’s a bit facetious, but I wonder if all that knitting time wouldn’t be better spent lobbying or protesting for change, and whether knitted donations aren’t more about gratifying the the donor than fulfilling a need.

I had these doubts in mind when I approached the Women’s Daytime Drop-in Center and asked if they needed a knitting teacher. I suspected my own motives and wondered whether I was offering something frivolous. But the volunteer coordinator assured me that to teach knitting to homeless and low-income women was to give them something of value –that the center’s clients needed more than just food, clothing, and shelter. I was reminded by this that homeless women and children are whole people; by offering a knitting class I would be honoring their creative impulses.

I’ve been teaching knitting and crochet at the center for about a year and a half now, and I see that the women and older kids do benefit from it. I’ve seen a piece of knitting in someone’s hands that takes their mind off anxieties and drug urges. Knitting can fill time waiting in social service offices, or waiting for the overnight shelter to open in the evening. A handmade hat or bag could be something to sell. But more frequently the clients benefit from knitting or crocheting the same ways that I do: acquiring a new skill is stimulating and satisfying; needlecrafting with a group is a nice way to socialize; and there’s just plain sensual pleasure in having beautifully colored and textured yarn running through your fingers.

Teaching at the Drop-in Center is fairly different from conducting a class at, say, a yarn store. Unstructured is the name of the game. I never know who will be there or what their skill set will be, so having a specific lesson to get through or project to finish is out of the question. Most of the time I teach casting on and the basic knit stitch (the very first steps to learning how to knit) over and over–and that’s OK. The clients at the center don’t know where they will be from week to week, and sometimes their stuff gets stolen because they’re living in a shelter with no secure storage. It’s fine with me if they take their supplies with them, or I can hold onto them from week to week. If I have to give someone a fresh set of needles and yarn every time they come, that’s not a problem. I rely on donated materials (but fellow knitters keep me supplied with yarn), and I’ve found some cheap sources of needles and crochet hooks.

I have to be ready for anything, including women who challenge my skills; I’m not a great crocheter, so I’ve had to brush up in order to help them. Often women have learned from their mothers or grandmothers and just need a refresher, and then it’s very possible that they’ll surpass my know-how.

I also get challenged personally on occasion, maybe by a client who’s in a volatile mood and ready to argue. That’s one of the ways that this volunteer gig has forced me to stretch and step out of my own comfort zone. I’ve learned to stay calm (at least on the outside) and communicate assertively. Even if my first impulse is to get out of the conflict by leaving the situation, I can ride it out and retain a respectful relationship with the client (and still mostly respect myself).

As much as I doubted my motives when I began, I also doubted my abilities. I doubted that I would know how to talk to women with lives so different from mine, and I was afraid of inadvertently saying something insensitive. With the volunteer coordinator’s help, I came to understand that it doesn’t take any special skill to meet someone where they are. You just listen to them, and respond the way you’d like to be talked to yourself.

I’ve also never thought that I had what it takes to be a teacher–I lack patience, and I can have a sharp tongue. But I’ve learned that I do know how to impart this particular skill, step by step, to another person. I can say “No, that’s not it–do it this way” nicely and without frustration, and I can cheer a client on when she gets the tricky part, and makes it to the end of the row. The opportunity for this kind of personal growth has really been a gift from the women to me. And more than anything else, being able to share my enthusiasm for knitting is very rewarding–I get a charge out of watching the clients ooh and ah over yarn or admire what they’ve made.

Of course the center is constantly scrambling for funds–it takes a lot of money to provide services to 150 women and children a month, including lunch every weekday. Last spring I hosted a “learn-to-knit” party with a good friend, to raise funds for the center and raise its profile among my friends and acquaintances. As a moneymaker it was modestly successful, but snagging the support of Rachel and Lisa of Help a Mother Out was a huge win.

I hope my tale shows that sharing your passion with the world is not frivolous, and can reap benefits you never expected.

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You can help the Women’s Daytime Drop-In Center by purchasing supplies off their wishlist here. Enormous thanks to Becca for introducing us to both the WDDC and the world of knitting.

Hellooooo, Tucson!

We’re thrilled to have provided inspiration for TucsonMama’s Mother’s Day donation drive to benefit the Diaper Bank of Southern Arizona, the nation’s first diaper bank. TucsonMama is a great resource for Tuscon-area parents, dishing up hot tips on local goings-on and offering a forum for networking and support.

We heart TucsonMama and hope their drive is a resounding success. Send some love their way!

A special thanks and dorky high-five to Tucson mama and friend o’ mine Rachel M., who’s orchestrating this drive all the way from Florence, Italy.

What’s the Big Deal About Diapers?

Or, the origins of Help A Mother Out

A few months ago, Lisa and I were enjoying a rare night out without kids or spouses. Over happy-hour sushi and cocktails, our conversation took a more serious turn. Like everyone else these days, we’ve been feeling the pinch of the economic downturn and the worry of an uncertain future—and yet we both realized just how fortunate we still are: We have our homes, our households have steady (if unpredictable) incomes, our children are healthy and well cared for. Lisa had recently heard about the growing numbers of newly homeless women and children and about the tent cities in Sacramento (prominently, possibly erroneously, featured on Oprah), and was deeply affected by the knowledge that many of these families never thought this could happen to them either.

A few weeks later, we both attended a knitting class that was a benefit for the Women’s Daytime Drop-in Center in Berkeley, an incredible organization neither of us had heard of before. The center’s volunteer coordinator spoke passionately of the work they’re doing—providing a safe, calm space for homeless women and children to spend the daytime hours, when overnight shelters are closed—and their most pressing needs—general funding, of course, but also very basic things like diapers, wipes, and toiletries.

It was a revelation to us that something so basic as a diaper could have such a big impact: Diapers are not covered by public assistance programs like WIC and diaper companies do not make big donations to shelters or outreach programs. If you’re not a parent, you might be surprised to realize that a “jumbo” pack of Pampers costs from $10 to $15—that’s 20 to 30 cents per diaper, depending on the size of the diaper. And if you can’t shop at discount stores like Target or Costco and instead have to rely on corner stores or drugstores, you’ll often end up paying even more per diaper. For reference, a newborn baby goes through 60 or more diapers a week. When money’s tight, that’s a lot of dough to drop.

According to the DiaperBank.org, in low-income families, a baby can spend a day or longer in the same diaper, “leading to potential health and abuse risks.” And furthermore, without an adequate supply of diapers, low-income parents can’t take advantage of free or subsidized childcare, making it even more difficult for them to consistently attend jobs or school.

And so over another meal (this time of kid-friendly french fries and mac ‘n cheese) we conceived of Help A Mother Out as a way to raise awareness and to raise some funds—to get a few more diapers into the hands of mothers who really, really need them. Lisa started contacting Bay Area agencies that provide services to homeless and low-income women, and was immediately overwhelmed by both the need for assistance and other people’s desire to help out. We spread the word to our friends and colleagues via email, Facebook, and neighborhood listservs, and before we knew it, diaper drives were under way in San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, Sacramento, San Jose, and San Diego. (And now even Tucson!)

It sounds big, and maybe it is, but it’s also very small: It’s one or two people, figuring out how to move beyond rhetoric to action; a handful of people buying cases of diapers off an Amazon wishlist; busy mothers donating their collections of hotel shampoos. It’s finding the time and the means to lend a hand to our community. We may not be changing the world, but changing diapers is pretty important too.

When you have nowhere else to turn

During the economic boom homeless shelters across the state were already filled with people down on their luck. According to this article from the San Bernardino Sun, it was mostly singles and couples who needed the help. Every single day of this economic recession, we are seeing more and moremothers and their children who have nowhere else to go.

From the San Bernardino Sun:

SAN BERNARDINO – For much of the past year, Norma Banuelos and her three daughters have divided their time between a home fraught with domestic violence in Redondo Beach and small motel rooms in Montebello.Early this week, Banuelos drove her Honda Accord, piled high with her belongings, to the Salvation Army on Fifth Street with the hope of getting a meal, a roof over her head and a new start in life.

“I am desperate and scared,” she said as she sat near the emergency homeless shelter, holding her sleeping 6-month-old daughter in her arms. “All I want is to get situated and put my kids in school.”

 

The Banuelos family is one of an increasing number of destitute families showing up in recent months at the Salvation Army and other facilities that provide meals and shelter to the homeless in San Bernardino County.

These are scary times for many of us. The reality is, most of us have extended family, or a rainy day fund to fall back on if things got really tough.  Maybe we wouldn’t want to move in with the folks. Perhaps it would be a huge personal disappointment if we had to relocate our family out of the state. But it is still there as an extra security blanket.