Sunday, November 14, 2010

November 14 - A Million Reasons to Believe!

"Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus.  He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist..."





It would seem that a bit of Santa's loving and generous spirit also resides in the staff and owners of Macy's Department Store.  Macy's has a great opportunity for the young and the young at heart among us to make a difference!  What a great opportunity to teach our children about giving back and helping others.



Macy's just kicked off their 3rd annual "Believe" campaign. The nostalgic campaign was inspired by the New York Sun's famous “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" editorial from 1897. Based on a letter to the editor of The New York Sun that was written by an 8-year old girl named Virginia O'Hanlon asking if Santa Claus existed.


As part of the "Believe" campaign, every Macy's store has a Believe Meter, letter-writing station and a mailbox to collect letters to Santa. Encourage your children write a letter to Santa, and then take the stamped, addressed letter to the store to mail it. Share with your child that for every letter collected, Macy's will contribute $1.00 to the Make-A-Wish Foundation®, up to one million dollars. Not only is your child writing their annual wish-filled letter to Santa, they are also helping other children have wishes granted.


The Make-A-Wish Foundation "grants the wishes of children with life-threatening medical conditions to enrich the human experience with hope, strength and joy." The Make-A-Wish Foundation was founded in 1980 after a little boy named Chris Greicius realized his heartfelt wish to become a police officer. Since its humble beginnings, the organization has blossomed into a worldwide phenomenon, reaching more than 193,000 children around the world.


A network of nearly 25,000 volunteers enable the Make-A-Wish Foundation to serve children with life-threatening medical conditions. Volunteers serve as wish granters, fundraisers, special events assistants and in numerous other capacities.


This website is AWESOME... you will love it as much as your children.  You can create, decorate and print out your letter to Santa to bring to Macy's.   This is not just for the young... Santa welcomes letters from people of all ages. Isn't it time to believe again?





What else does Macy's have planned to celebrate this holiday season?


•The "Yes Virginia" animated TV special returns to CBS on Dec. 17th.
•"Yes Virginia" is available as a DVD and in book format at all Macy's stores. A portion of the proceeds benefit Make-A-Wish.
•The"Virginia" hot air balloon debuts in the Macy's Thanksgiving parade!
•Facebook fans can enjoy "The Believe Challenge" Frogger(R)-like online game, while raising additional funds for Make-A-Wish. Begins 11/17/10 on Macy's Facebook page.








Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!



Resource:  Macy's
                    Make A Wish

Saturday, November 13, 2010

November 13 - One World...One Passion... One Sight

According to the World Health Organization, 314 million people worldwide suffer from poor vision simply because they do not have access to or cannot afford care. In some countries, a pair of eyewear costs more than a month’s salary. Poor vision negatively effects a child’s ability to learn in school and robs an adult of independence, mobility and quality of life.





For more than 20 years, OneSight has been committed to providing clear vision to millions in need through the hand-delivery of primary vision care and eyewear. We also donate millions of dollars to fund research towards the prevention of optical diseases.


Our Mission – To restore and preserve clear vision for the 314 million adults and children in need who can not afford basic eye care.  Our Vision – A world where primary eye care is a reality for everyone.


In 2010, OneSight volunteers will give the gift of sight during 15 Global Clinics in eleven developing countries including first time visits to Burkina Faso, Ethiopia and Ghana. Twenty-two weeks of Regional Clinics are
scheduled across North America, China and Australia while twin Vision Vans, “SeeMore” and “Iris” will make more than 40 stops in smaller communities across North America to provide free vision care and new eyewear to those in need.



Two million pairs of glasses are needed annually to support our Global Clinics. You can help by donating your gently used eyewear today.  We gladly accept donations of gently used eyewear including men, women and children’s prescription eyewear and non-prescription sunglasses. Donated eyewear is then cleaned, repaired, quality-inspected and logged into a computer database for easy selection during our Global Clinics.




 
 
Get Involved: 
 
Make a monetary donation to One Sight.
 
Donate your eyewear.  Find the donation location nearest you.
 
Organize an eyewear drive.








Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!




Resource:  www.onesight.org/na/

Friday, November 12, 2010

November 12 - "Caring for the Nation...One Person at a Time."

November is National Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month.

Alzheimer's disease is a progressive, degenerative disorder that attacks the brain's nerve cells, or neurons, resulting in loss of memory, thinking and language skills, and behavioral changes.   Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia, or loss of intellectual function, among people aged 65 and older.  Alzheimer's disease is not a normal part of aging.




The Alzheimer's Foundation of America was founded by a consortium of organizations to fill the gap that existed on a national level to assure quality of care and excellence in service to individuals with Alzheimer's disease and related illnesses, and to their caregivers and families.  Our focus is "Caring for the Nation...One Person at a Time."

AFA unites more than 1,400 member organizations from coast-to-coast that are dedicated to meeting the educational, social, emotional and practical needs of individuals with Alzheimer's disease and related illnesses, and their caregivers and families. Under AFA's umbrella, these organizations collaborate on education, resources, program design and implementation, fundraising campaigns, and advocacy—all resulting in better care for those affected by the disease.

AFA believes that by raising awareness of the disease and educating healthcare professionals and the public at large, we will:
  • Help remove the stigma of the disease
  • Lead to early detection and proper treatment
  • Prompt greater utilization of community resources
  • Ultimately improve quality of life
It is estimated that as many as 5.1 million Americans may have Alzheimer's disease.  Although Alzheimer's disease is not a normal part of aging, the risk of developing the illness rises with advanced age. Current research from the National Institute on Aging indicates that the prevalence of Alzheimer's disease doubles every five years beyond age 65.   As our population ages, the disease impacts a greater percentage of Americans. The number of people age 65 and older will more than double between 2010 and 2050 to 88.5 million or 20 percent of the population; likewise, those 85 and older will rise three-fold, to 19 million, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. 


About a half million Americans younger than age 65 have some form of dementia, including Alzheimer's disease. (This is referred to as young onset or early onset.) It is estimated that one to four family members act as caregivers for each individual with Alzheimer's disease.

 
Donations help fund our toll-free helpline with resources and referrals, respite care grants, grants for member organizations that provide direct care and support, educational conferences, national initiatives such as National Memory Screening Day, professional education and training, and AFA Teens. In addition, through strategic partnerships, AFA funds research for medical treatment and a cure.




Get Involved:
Make a donation to Alzheimer's Foundation of America.
DONATE BY TEXTING.   Text AFA to 50555 to donate $10.
- $10 will be added to your mobile phone bill/deducted from your prepaid account. Message and Data Rates may Apply. Reply STOP to 50555 to stop. Full terms: www.mGive.org/T.Privacy Policy

Alzheimer's Foundation of America's Quilt to Remember.  









Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!




Resource:  Alzheimer's Foundation of America.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

November 11 - U S O

Happy Veteran's Day! THANK YOU to all of the Veterans and their families who have made such tremendous sacrifices in service to their country!




Throughout our country’s history, Americans have felt a profound appreciation and gratitude for the dedication and sacrifice of our troops and their families. The USO (United Service Organizations)  provides a tangible way for all of us to say thank you, as it has for almost 70 years.


Supporting America’s troops was the first mission of the USO. In 1941, as it became clear that the nation was heading into World War II, several organizations mobilized to support the growing U.S. military: the Salvation Army, Young Men’s Christian Association, Young Women’s Christian Association, National Catholic Community Services, National Travelers Aid Association and the National Jewish Welfare Board.


President Franklin D. Roosevelt created synergy among these agencies by forming the United Service Organizations, with the objective of providing the emotional support the troops needed.  Over time, the USO has evolved, developing new programs and services to meet the ever-changing needs of the troops and their families, while holding fast to the original mission.


Every day, our heroes in uniform put their lives on the line to protect the freedoms we hold so dear. Our troops are serving in desolate locations, dealing with multiple deployments and missing their families and friends back home. Whether stationed in the mountains of Afghanistan or recovering courageously in a hospital in Germany, our troops and their families deserve the very best we can give.


Thanks to your generosity, the USO fulfills its mission of lifting the spirits of America’s troops and their families. Through the USO, you touch their lives through an extensive range of programs at more than 150 centers in 27 countries, and at hundreds of entertainment events each year. Thousands of USO volunteers do everything possible to provide a home away from home for our troops and to keep them connected to the families they left behind.


The USO makes sure your help goes to those who need it the most: troops serving in combat, their families, our wounded warriors and their families, and families of the fallen.

As a nonprofit, non-political organization, the USO is now, and always will be, about our troops. Wherever and whenever they go, the USO will be there, until every one comes home.



Get Involved:

Donate to USO

Learn about USO Programs.

Ways to Volunteer with USO

Shop the USO online store.









Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!




Resource:  http://www.uso.org/

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

November 10 - Angel Giving Tree Online

Here's another opportunity to make a difference in the lives of children and seniors during the upcoming holiday season!   It is so simple and you won't even have to leave the comfort of your home... no going out shopping, mailing or delivering gifts!  You can do it all sitting in front of your PC -  in your jammies!





J. C. Penney Co. and The Salvation Army have joined forces again this holiday season to give joy to even more children and seniors in need through an online Angel Giving Tree program. The Salvation Army Angel Giving Tree online presented by JCPenney builds on the legacy of an annual Christmas tradition that provides clothing, special-needs gifts and other wish list items to kids and senior citizens. As the exclusive online destination for adopting Salvation Army Angels, jcp.com/angel allows customers to select an Angel anywhere in the U.S. -- making it easier than ever to buy and ship their Angel gifts free from the convenience of their home, office or anywhere in the world.




“In the first year of introducing this program online, nearly 40,000 Angels from across the country were adopted last Christmas,” said Thomas M. Nealon, group executive vice president. “Now, more than ever, customers want to make a difference during the holidays. JCPenney has made it easier for customers to give back in a meaningful way and we feel confident that support for those less fortunate will only continue to grow.”



The online Angel Giving Tree program allows customers to adopt an Angel at jcp.com/angel and request an Angel by location, age range and gender. An Angel who matches the criteria will be e-mailed to the customer along with a list of requested items. Supporters have the convenience and flexibility of purchasing gifts at jcp.com, in JCPenney stores or at any retailer they choose.



With program support from UPS, Angel Giving Tree gifts purchased through jcp.com can be shipped free of charge to the corresponding Salvation Army collection center. The confirmation e-mail will also include a link to drop-off locations in the recipient’s area and ship-to addresses for online orders placed at jcp.com or at other retailers. In order to ensure delivery by Christmas, adoptions and online purchases must be made before Dec. 10. Supporters may also purchase JCPenney Gift Cards through Dec. 14, which will be delivered to Angels so they can buy an item on their wish list.



“The Salvation Army is preparing for what is expected to be another record number of families seeking help this Christmas,” said Major George Hood, national community relations and development secretary for The Salvation Army. “With the need greater than ever, we appreciate JCPenney’s commitment to continue this program so that more children and seniors living in poverty can experience the joy that one small Christmas gift can bring.”



Get Involved:

Adopt an Angel.  Provide a gift for a needy child or senior.










Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!






Resource:  Salvation Army / JC Penney

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

November 9 - Teens Making A Difference

One of the greatest joys I have in writing this blog is learning of young people and all of the awesome things they are doing to make a difference!  There are so many wonderful young people out there working hard and unfortunately we don't hear enough about them.  Today I am highlighting 2 awesome sisters...Caitlyn and Maria Toth!



Teens Making A Difference are two teenage sisters who want to increase awareness about local and nationwide community needs.  Their mission is to empower young people to become active with the adults of our communities to make our world a better place. Teens Making A Difference enables people from all over the world to help in various ways. The GOAL is show that it doesn't take alot to make a difference in your community and that as teenagers we have the power to bring about a positive change. One hundred years from now, it will not matter what kind of car we drove, what kind of house we lived in, or how much money we had in the bank. But, the world may be a better place because we made a difference in a child's life!



In June 2010, Caitlyn and Maria started a Facebook group page called "Help Us Help The Gulf Wildlife" to ask for donations of Dawn (blue) Dish Soap to help save countless wildlife affected from the Gulf Oil spill. The donation drive, which ran from mid-June to August 1, 2010 did not seek monetary donations, just the dish liquid, critical to the animal rescue efforts being made by volunteers the Gulf region. Through word of mouth and passing out flyers at the mall, almost 8,000 people from all over the world joined their Facebook group and supported the effort. The donation drive collected over 5,300 bottles of Dawn Dish Soap that will be used to clean the animals. (AWESOME WORK!) They arranged to have a locally-owned logistics company with an 18-wheeler drive the bottles at NO CHARGE to a sanctuary in Florida on August 10, 2010.



Maria and Caitlyn have now caught the philanthropy bug and started a community service campaign called "Teens Making a Difference".   We have partnered with Project Night Night, Parma Education Association, Parma Area Family to Family Collaborative, and Help Me Grow (Ohio) and will be donating new and gently-used books to children to improve reading skills throughout the community. As teen students they realize reading is the very basic skill needed to be successful in school.


The current goal is to get books into the homes of as many at-risk children as possible. They have partnered with several non-profit agencies to supply them with the books that they collect. You can help in so many ways - PLEASE JOIN US!! Help us to get books into the homes of every child possible - NOT every child has their very own book to read.




Get Involved:

Caitlyn and Maria do not accept monetary donations!   DO NOT MAIL MONEY. Any cash or checks received will be returned to sender.  WE ONLY ACCEPT NEW OR GENTLY-USED BOOKS. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY CAUSE.

PLEASE MAIL YOUR NEW OR GENTLY USED BOOKS TO:

Teens Making A Difference
Caitlyn and Maria Toth
c/o Parmatown Mall
7855 W. Ridgewood Dr.
Parma, OH 44129

PLEASE MARK PACKAGE "NO SIGNATURE REQUIRED"

The US Postal Service has special rates for BOOKS. Be sure to tell the postal clerk that you are mailing BOOKS and that you want them to be sent "MEDIA MAIL."   MUCH CHEAPER!!! Thank you to all who send books!!



FOR LOCAL DONATIONS: (Parma OH area)

Parmatown Mall - Official Dropoff

Next door to American Greetings NEXT to Toys For Tots

Our collection of books will continue throughout the school year with distribution of these books to our various partnered agencies each month.


Caitlyn and Maria....YOU INSPIRE US!  First, helping Gulf Shore animals and now literacy...YOU ARE TRUE HEROES!









Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!






Resource:  Teens Making A Difference

Monday, November 8, 2010

November 8 - Make a difference this Thanksgiving...for $10.

THIS THANKSGIVING GIVE THANKSGIVING TO A FAMILY IN NEED FOR 10 BUCKS!



Earlier this year I highlighted Family-to-Family and their Birthday in a Box program!  Today I am highlighting them for a different reason...
You can help Family-to-Family provide Thanksgiving Turkeys to needy families this Thanksgiving! 


Family-to-Family wants to make Thanksgiving happen again this year for all of the families in our “extended family”.


Help us make this happen by making a $10 donation to purchase a turkey plus one side dish (e.g., potatoes or stuffing) for one recipient family. Or buy a "flock of turkeys" (you choose how many) to feed more than one family.


Family-to-Family is a not-for-profit hunger relief program aimed at helping profoundly poor American families.  Community based, F-to-F links families with "more" to families with much less. With no agenda other than helping fellow citizens, Family-to-Family taps into a vast reservoir of stored generosity.




“No act of kindness is too small. The gift of kindness may start as a small ripple that over time can turn into a tidal wave affecting the lives of many.” -- Kevin Heath    



 Let's start a TIDAL WAVE!! 




Get Involved: 

Buy a Turkey or a flock of turkeys for needy families.








Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!






Resource:  Family to Family

November 7 - Save A Sato





Save A Sato is a non-profit, all volunteer organization dedicated to easing the suffering of Puerto Rico's homeless and abused animals. "Sato" is slang for street dog. We rescue Satos from the streets and beaches, give them medical care, food and shelter, and plenty of love. When they are healthy, we send them to one of our shelter partners for adoption into loving homes.

Chantal Robles and Karen Fehrenback were each doing their own rescue work to help dogs abandoned in the streets of Puerto Rico when they met at a veterinarian's office in 1994. That meeting led to a lasting friendship - forged over the shared belief that animals deserve compassion - and the start of a joint rescue operation.

As that small operation attracted more and more animal lovers who wanted to help, it grew into Save a Sato, which was incorporated as a nonprofit foundation in 1996. Long-time animal advocate, Gloria Marti, soon joined the team and they built their very own small animal shelter in San Juan. With the help of friends and other animal lovers, they were soon able to develop partnerships with a network of no-kill shelters in the United States that would take in their dogs and find them loving and secure homes.

In fact, the arrangement worked very well for these shelters, which typically did not have enough dogs surrendered locally to meet the high demand for adoption. Since then, Save a Sato has rescued and rehomed nearly 20,000 dogs and several hundred cats. In addition, the organization provides low-cost spay and neutering services to as many as 200 local animals every year.






Get Involved:

 
Donate here.

Learn ways to help here.

Get the iPhone App.

Be a Sato Escort.
Help us bring happy, healthy, rescued dogs to loving homes on the mainland--be a Sato transport escort!
We always need transport escorts to accompany our dogs on flights to their new homes....federal law prohibits us from sending dogs without a corresponding traveler. If you are leaving Puerto Rico on an American Airlines flight to one of the airports below please consider escorting a sato! If you are interested in donating your American Airlines Frequent Flyer miles to Save a Sato please click here.








Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!






Resource:  Save A Sato

Saturday, November 6, 2010

November 6 - Pepsi Refresh Project

It's time to get out and vote... again!  This time we're not voting for politicians, we are voting for ways to make the world a better place!




The Pepsi Refresh Project is like a giant online contest and has been giving away millions since the beginning of the year to "good" ideas, big and small, in communities across the country. You decide what's a good idea... you decide who gets a grant! The Pepsi Refresh Project is an effort to change the world by providing funding to those who wish to make the world a better place.



The Pepsi Refresh Project is a year long campaign where money will be given to those individuals and groups that provide ideas for improving the world either on a local or more widespread level. Pepsi has pledged to put more than $20 million toward this project. The initial idea was to take money that could have been spent on Superbowl ads and instead re-channeling those funds to where they could do the most good. What a great idea!



All you have to do is register on the site and then look over the ideas which have been submitted.  Then cast your votes for those ideas you would like to see funded.  The top 10 ideas are funded in the $5,000 and $25,000 and $50,000 catagories.  The top 2 ideas receive funding in the $250,000 catagory.



You can help deserving causes obtain much needed funding!  You can vote 10 times each day... it's hard to pick only 10 because all the requests are deserving.  Below are links to some of the causes I am voting for this month!  I would be happy to have you join me in supporting these causes if you so desire or choose those that are meaningful for you!



:  )       :  )        :  )       :  )        :  )        :  )        :  )        :  )            
               

http://pep.si/bgyXPy    - 13 year old Mollie Watson volunteers with her father at the local humane society.  Mollie wants to provide beds and toys to her local humane society!  You Rock Molly! 

http://pep.si/c8syLT  -   Helping Babies with Cystic Fibrosis.  CFF is a group of people working to cure cystic fibrosis, an inherited and life-threatening disease that fills the lungs with thick mucus and causes premature death.

http://pep.si/aL9RWv  -  4 Luv of Dog Rescue is an all volunteer group that rescues dogs from pounds and from owners who are no longer able to provide adequate care for their pets. We placed 301 dogs in new homes in 2009. Some of these dogs came from horrific situations of abuse and neglect and were in need of vet care.

http://pep.si/b1EDk2  -  Shadow's Pet Pantry is a non profit which provides food for dogs and cats for families in need.  I highlighted Shadow's in an earlier post and continue to support this worthwhile cause.

http://pep.si/aXK5Nd  -   The mission of The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society is to cure Leukemia, Lymphoma, Hodgkin’s Disease and Myeloma, and to also improve the quality of life for patients and their families. Every 5 minutes, someone new is diagnosed with Blood Cancer, every 10 minutes, someone dies. Almost one million Americans are still waiting for a cure.

http://pep.si/9wFhZG  -  Our project will include gathering and distributing pet food and supplies to those families facing the possibility of losing thier pets due to financial difficulties.  Area animal shelters are not able to take all of the pets and the euthanasia rate has been on the rise. We are also seeing an increase of homeless pets.

http://pep.si/cevUbZ  -  ARF is a no-kill animal sanctuary in Mississippi. Most of the rescued animals are abandoned, neglected or abused. All rescues are given veterinary care, good food, compassion and love while they wait for their "forever home" with a family that will continue to care for them and love them.




These are just a few of the projects I am voting for... please take a few minutes to vote for those ideas you support.  Let's get some great ideas funded! 








Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!




Source:  Pepsi Refresh Project.

Friday, November 5, 2010

November 5 - American Diabetes Association



November is American Diabetes Month®, a time to communicate the seriousness of diabetes and the importance of diabetes prevention and control. For years, the American Diabetes Association has used this month as an opportunity to raise awareness of the disease and its serious complications.
 
 
In 2009, the Association launched a national movement to Stop Diabetes® – with the audacious goal of gathering the support millions of Americans to help confront, fight and most importantly, stop diabetes.
Join the Stop Diabetes movement right now and Diet V8 Splash will donate $5, up to $50,000 to support diabetes research, education and advocacy efforts.



With nearly 24 million children and adults in the United States living with diabetes, and an additional 57 million Americans at risk, there is no time to waste. One out of every three children born today will face a future with diabetes if current trends continue. Diabetes is not merely a condition. It is disease with deadly consequences. Drastic action is needed. From everyone.


Nearly 24 million children and adults in the United States have diabetes. Another 57 million Americans have prediabetes and are at risk for developing type 2 diabetes. One out of every 3 children (and 1 in 2 minority children) born in the United States today will face a future with diabetes if current trends continue.



The death rate from diabetes continues to climb. Since 1987, the death rate due to diabetes has increased by 45%, while the death rates due to cancer, heart disease, and stroke have declined.
 
 
 
 
Get Involved:
 
Donate to American Diabetes Association.
 
Shop online for Diabetes at the Gift Of Hope.
 
Other ways you can give back to ADA.
 

 






Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!




Source:  http://www.diabetes.org/

Thursday, November 4, 2010

November 4 - Six out of Ten



5 out of 10 dogs and 7 out of 10 cats entering shelters are euthanized (killed) - for no other reason than they have no to care for them.  No one to adopt them.  Many of those destroyed are young animals...  Most are perfectly healthy... All of them need our help! 


Below is a letter that appeared on Craigslist in December of 2008. Since that time it has become a rallying cry for those who rescue animals.  It was written by a shelter manager and let me tell you... it is powerful.  It is disturbing... but hopefully it teaches and motivates us to make a difference.  Pet overpopulation is a very real problem and education is part of the solution. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


A Letter from a Shelter Manager
 I think our society needs a huge "Wake-up" call. As a shelter manager, I am going to share a little insight with you all...a view from the inside if you will.


First off, all of you breeders/sellers should be made to work in the "back" of an animal shelter for just one day. Maybe if you saw the life drain from a few sad, lost, confused eyes, you would change your mind about breeding and selling to people you don't even know.


That puppy you just sold will most likely end up in my shelter when it's not a cute little puppy anymore. So how would you feel if you knew that there's about a 90% chance that dog will never walk out of the shelter it is going to be dumped at? Purebred or not! About 50% of all of the dogs that are "owner surrenders" or "strays", that come into my shelter are purebred dogs.


The most common excuses I hear are; "We are moving and we can't take our dog (or cat)." Really? Where are you moving too that doesn't allow pets? Or they say "The dog got bigger than we thought it would". How big did you think a German Shepherd would get? "We don't have time for her". Really? I work a 10-12 hour day and still have time for my 6 dogs! "She's tearing up our yard". How about making her a part of your family? They always tell me "We just don't want to have to stress about finding a place for her we know she'll get adopted, she's a good dog".


Odds are your pet won't get adopted & how stressful do you think being in a shelter is? Well, let me tell you, your pet has 72 hours to find a new family from the moment you drop it off. Sometimes a little longer if the shelter isn't full and your dog manages to stay completely healthy. If it sniffles, it dies. Your pet will be confined to a small run/kennel in a room with about 25 other barking or crying animals. It will have to relieve itself where it eats and sleeps. It will be depressed and it will cry constantly for the family that abandoned it. If your pet is lucky, I will have enough volunteers in that day to take him/her for a walk. If I don't, your pet won't get any attention besides having a bowl of food slid under the kennel door and the waste sprayed out of its pen with a high-powered hose. If your dog is big, black or any of the "Bully" breeds (pit bull, rottie, mastiff, etc) it was pretty much dead when you walked it through the front door.


Those dogs just don't get adopted. It doesn't matter how 'sweet' or 'well behaved' they are.


If your dog doesn't get adopted within its 72 hours and the shelter is full, it will be destroyed. If the shelter isn't full and your dog is good enough, and of a desirable enough breed it may get a stay of execution, but not for long . Most dogs get very kennel protective after about a week and are destroyed for showing aggression. Even the sweetest dogs will turn in this environment. If your pet makes it over all of those hurdles chances are it will get kennel cough or an upper respiratory infection and will be destroyed because shelters just don't have the funds to pay for even a $100 treatment.


Here's a little euthanasia 101 for those of you that have never witnessed a perfectly healthy, scared animal being "put-down".

First, your pet will be taken from its kennel on a leash. They always look like they think they are going for a walk happy, wagging their tails. Until they get to "The Room", every one of them freaks out and puts on the brakes when we get to the door. It must smell like death or they can feel the sad souls that are left in there, it's strange, but it happens with every one of them. Your dog or cat will be restrained, held down by 1 or 2 vet techs depending on the size and how freaked out they are. Then a euthanasia tech or a vet will start the process. They will find a vein in the front leg and inject a lethal dose of the "pink stuff". Hopefully your pet doesn't panic from being restrained and jerk. I've seen the needles tear out of a leg and been covered with the resulting blood and been deafened by the yelps and screams. They all don't just "go to sleep", sometimes they spasm for a while, gasp for air and defecate on themselves.


When it all ends, your pets corpse will be stacked like firewood in a large freezer in the back with all of the other animals that were killed waiting to be picked up like garbage. What happens next? Cremated? Taken to the dump? Rendered into pet food? You'll never know and it probably won't even cross your mind. It was just an animal and you can always buy another one, right?


I hope that those of you that have read this are bawling your eyes out and can't get the pictures out of your head I deal with everyday on the way home from work.


I hate my job, I hate that it exists & I hate that it will always be there unless you people make some changes and realize that the lives you are affecting go much farther than the pets you dump at a shelter.


Between 9 and 11 MILLION animals die every year in shelters and only you can stop it. I do my best to save every life I can but rescues are always full, and there are more animals coming in everyday than there are homes.  My point to all of this DON'T BREED OR BUY WHILE SHELTER PETS DIE!


Hate me if you want to. The truth hurts and reality is what it is. I just hope I maybe changed one person's mind about breeding their dog, taking their loving pet to a shelter, or buying a dog. I hope that someone will walk into my shelter and say "I saw this and it made me want to adopt". THAT WOULD MAKE IT WORTH IT

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Get Involved:

PLEASE Send this article to everyone you know!  Education is one way to help fight this epidemic. 

Find a shelter or rescue in your area.  Adopt or foster an animal if at all possible.  Find out what their needs are and help provide those needs.

100 Ways to help an animal rescue.








Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!




Source:  ASPCA

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

November 3 - Get Swabbed! Save A Life!

The world has lost a bright shining light. 

On Monday, Shannon Tavarez, the 11 year old actress who starred as young Nala in the Lion King on Broadway, has lost her battle with leukemia.  You can read more about Shannon Tavarez here. Our thoughts and prayers go out to Shannon's family and friends as they walk through this very difficult time.


Although Shannon was not with us for a long time, her impact was enormous!  Shannon was a light that shone brightly among us and that light will continue to shine because of the impact she had on getting others to register as marrow donors.   Katharina Harf, co-founder of the bone marrow donor center DKMS, said the donor center registered 10,000 people as potential donors.


Shannon had received an umbilical-cord blood transplant in August. The procedure was performed as an alternative to a Bone Marrow transplant as a perfect bone marrow match for Shannon could not be found.
Unfortunately, Shannon lost her battle...but this beautiful little angel will help many others find a marrow donor.  Check out this video of Shannon singing "The Circle of Life"  from The Lion King.





EVERY FIVE MINUTES... Someone is diagnosed with blood cancer.
EVERY TEN MINUTES... Someone dies from blood cancer.
TEN MINUTES of your time might SAVE A LIFE!



DKMS Americas is a donor center which is a member organization of the Be The Match Registry® (operated by the NMDP).   DKMS works to expand bone marrow donor registries by recruiting bone marrow donors from every race and ethnicity, in order to provide leukemia and other blood cancer patients in need of a bone marrow transplant with the best available donor match.


The mission of DKMS is to save lives by recruiting bone marrow donors for leukemia patients. More than 23,000 DKMS donors worldwide have helped save lives by donating their bone marrow. DKMS is the largest bone marrow donor center in the world with nearly 2.5 million registered donors. However, there are still thousands of patients who cannot find their donor match. DKMS will continue to recruit bone marrow donors until every patient gets a second chance at life.


DKMS also coordinates the transport of bone marrow and blood stem cells from Germany to the U.S. for patients here in need of bone marrow transplants. Through our efforts, DKMS Americas has registered over 160,000 donors, and more than 270 DKMS (Americas) donors have gone on to donate their bone marrow.


There is still more work to do as only 4 out of 10 people will receive a life-saving transplant. Therefore, we need your help. Learn more.



Get Involved:

Donate to DKMS America.


Organize a Bone Marrow Drive in your area.







Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!




Source:  http://www.dkmsamericas.org/

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

November 2 - Operation Christmas Child




8 MILLION CHILDREN received your shoe boxes last year
OVER 130 COUNTRIES have received shoe boxes since 1993


Through Operation Christmas Child, the world’s largest Christmas project, Americans are helping send shoe box gifts this year to more than 8 million children in 100 countries suffering from natural disaster, war, terrorism, disease, famine and poverty.  The shoe box gifts will be sorted and sent using whatever means necessary — sea containers, trucks, trains, airplanes, boats, camels, even dog sleds — to reach suffering children around the world. 

Operation Christmas Child uses tracking technology that allows donors to “follow your box” to the destination country where it will be hand-delivered to a child in need. To register shoe box gifts and find out what country they are delivered to, use the EZ Give donation form found at http://www.samaritanspurse.org/.


How does this work?

1. GET A SHOE BOX:
Use an empty shoe box (standard size, please) or a small plastic container. You can wrap the box (lid separately), but wrapping is not required. Most importantly, pray for the child who will receive your gift.

2. BOY OR GIRL?
Determine whether your gift will be for a boy or a girl, and the child’s age category: 2-4, 5-9, or 10-14. Print out the appropriate boy/girl label by downloading the artwork to the right. Mark the correct age category on the label, and tape the label to the top of your box.

3. FILL WITH GIFTS:
Fill the box with a variety of gifts that will bring delight to a child. Use the gift ideas provided on the OCC webpage.

4. INCLUDE YOUR DONATION:
Please donate $7 or more for each shoe box you prepare to help cover shipping and other project costs. You can give online by using our EZGIVE option, or you can write a check to Samaritan’s Purse (note “OCC” on memo line) and place it in an envelope on top of the gift items inside your box. If you or your family are preparing more than one shoe box, please make one combined donation.

5. DROP OFF:
Place a rubber band around each closed shoe box and drop off at the Collection Center nearest you during our collection week November 15 - 22.


For locations and hours of collection visit our Drop-Off Locations page where you can find the nearest place to take your shoe box by entering your ZIP Code or you can call 1-800-353-5949.




You can also send your shoe box gift to:
Samaritan’s Purse
Operation Christmas Child
801 Bamboo Road
Boone, NC 28607






Get Involved:

If this is something you would like to participate in, there is still time!  National Collection Week is November 15 - 22, 2010.   Find a drop off  location in your area.

Volunteer opportunities (at Christmas or Year-round) with OCC.








Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!




Source:  www.SamaritansPurse.org

Monday, November 1, 2010

November 1 - Halloween Candy Buy Back!



Got Candy?  Halloween is over ... and I'm sure there are many families out there with way too much candy... want to get rid of some of it and make a difference at the same time! 


Children from across America have a chance to once again make a difference in a service member's life by locating a dentist who is participating in the annual Halloween Candy Buy Back.  For the fourth year in a row, hundreds of dentists throughout the United States are teaming up with Operation Gratitude, a non-profit organization dedicated to sending care packages to troops overseas.

HOW DOES IT WORK?

After Halloween, dentists purchase the unopened candy from young trick-or-treaters for $1 per pound. Once these dentists have collected the candy, they ship it to Operation Gratitude to fill up thousands of care packages for the troops. For troop safety, Operation Gratitude works from the Army National Guard armory in Van Nuys, California to assemble the packages. Once completed, they are sent to service members overseas.


"We still have 180,000 troops deployed in harm's way. Receiving packages from home, especially during the holidays, is a huge morale boost for our men and women in uniform," said Carolyn Blashek, founder of Operation Gratitude. "Every year of the Candy Buy Back program, we have received more and more support from across the country. Last year, we collected 122,000 pounds of candy. We hope to surpass that number this year!"

By donating their candy to this patriotic cause, children can learn about service and giving back, and also cut down on gorging themselves with Halloween candy. Each year more and more children are becoming obese: in fact, according to the National Center for Health Statistics, 15 percent of children ages 6 to 18 are overweight. A simple step like reducing sugar intake is an easy way to help curb the obesity epidemic.


Dentists are a crucial step in the Halloween Candy Buy Back program. Leading the dentists is Dr. Chris Kammer of Lifetime Family Dentistry in Middleton, Wisconsin. Dr. Kammer has been receiving donated candy for years at his practice, and in 2007, wanted to expand his program. That's when he got in touch with Carolyn at Operation Gratitude. Since then, he has been on the forefront of this program and has helped grow the involvement from dentists nationwide. 


"I usually share the story of a young soldier who was preparing to take his own life," said Dr. Kammer. "But then he received a care package from Operation Gratitude and it made all the difference to him. These packages are not just candy and socks; they become a special delivery of hope for our men and women overseas and also an affirmation that they are thought about everyday back home."


Troops share the candy with members of their unit to brighten their day, but it can also be an effective combat tool to win the hearts and minds of the local population, which in turn can lead to saving many lives. When the troops share the candy with children and families in and around the villages in which they are patrolling, the locals often provide intelligence about insurgents, Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) and other dangers. 


After receiving a package from Operation Gratitude, one Marine sent this letter:
"I just received your care package today and wanted to take a minute to say thank you so very much for your generosity and support. You have no idea just how much all your support means to all of us over here. The timing of your package could not have been any better. It definitely helped to brighten an otherwise dismal couple of days. I shared the goodies in your care package with all of the Marines in my work center so your generosity touched many, some of whom had not received anything from back home. It's generous people like you that make all the long months away from home and family and friends worth the sacrifice. We can't thank you enough for your generous donation and support. On behalf of all my Marines: Thank you and Semper Fidelis. Sincerely, GYSGT S. R."



HOW CAN YOU HELP?

This year, dentists are also collecting other care package items that are needed, such as:
  • beanie babies or other small stuffed animals
  • handmade scarves
  • socks
  • DVDs and CDs
  • personal letters

Operation Gratitude encourages anyone who has a family member or friend deployed overseas to fill out a request care package form on the Operation Gratitude website. The organization will send the package this Holiday season. Family members and supporters can visit www.OperationGratitude.com to share contact information or learn how they can support the troops.

  

Find a participating dentist near you.


About Operation Gratitude:
Operation Gratitude annually sends 100,000+ care packages filled with snacks, entertainment items and personal letters of appreciation addressed to individually named U.S. Service Members deployed in harm's way. Their mission is to lift morale, bring a smile to a service member's face and express to the Armed Forces the appreciation and support of the American people. Each package contains donated product valued at about $125 and costs the organization $15 to assemble and ship. For safety and security, assembling of packages occurs at the Army National Guard armory in Van Nuys, California. Since its inception in 2003, Operation Gratitude volunteers have shipped more than 560,000 packages to American Military deployed overseas. For more information on Operation Gratitude please visit www.OperationGratitude.com.










Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!




Source:  Operation Gratitude, Halloween Candy Buy Back.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

October 31 - LoveBags

More than 1,000 people now live in New York City's subway system -- up 11 percent in the past year. That is a very mind numbing thought!  I have never been to New York, but I have been in subway systems located in other cities.  I can't imagine living there!  Homelessness and hunger are huge problems all over the country.  Recently, I have been reading about a tent city that is located in my area - Ann Arbor, MI.  By most accounts a fairly affluent community.  Home of the University of Michigan.  Excellent Schools... and a homeless population living in a tent city off the expressway.   Tucked away out of sight... and out of mind for most of us.




LoveBags is doing something about hunger and homelessness - and changing lives in the process!  Homelessness is a huge problem in our cities all across America. We’re all volunteers, and we believe that change begins with a consistent relationship.  LoveBags groups work with homeless individuals on the streets in Fort Lauderdale, Pompano Beach, Indianapolis, South Bend, Asheville, Washington DC, Los Angeles, and Orlando.

A LoveBag is a zip-loc bag with things that make life on the street a little easier. Carry one in your backpack, car, or join a meetup group.  Making a LoveBags is simple! Just take a zip-loc bag, add a water bottle, crackers, fruit cup, some socks, a tuna fish pack, granola bar, and then just a note to say you care!
 


THE OTHER SIDE OF SOUTH BEACH - the humble beginnings of LoveBags:

Over the years I've been down to South Beach a few times to check it out. I've always felt awkwardly out of place amid the perfectly tanned, toned and wealthy who frequent the high-end club and bar scene. However, the summer of '06 I began to go down there regularly with some friends – three, sometimes four nights a week. Our intent, however, wasn't to visit bars, clubs or restaurants.

Before we would go down, a group of us would make 200-plus peanut butter and jelly sandwiches (cookie and water included). Let's just say... I got pretty awesome at making sandwiches. We would meet up with some other people and proceed to bring dinner, PB & J style, to our many homeless friends who would hang at the beach along Ocean Drive.


Anyone who's been to South Beach knows that Ocean Drive is the hottest place to be, lined with it's high-end clubs, bars and restaurants. The beautiful people hang out there and meet other beautiful people and are, well, beautiful together. What most people didn't know is that across the street, less than 40 yards away, were hundreds of men, women and occasionally children who called the beach their home at night. It was on that side that I found beauty.


The homeless gladly welcomed us and became our friends. We knew some of their names, and they all knew ours. Some of them were crazy, some mean, most of them kind and all just wanting to be loved and listened to, reminded that they still had value and dignity. Sometimes we would tell them about Jesus, sometimes not; sometimes we would just listen, or leave a sandwich next to a sleeping body. We became known as the "Angels of the Night" and the "Peanut Butter Bandits."


It was over that period of six months on South Beach that my skewed perceptions of the homeless were changed. I began to really love them (You know it's love when you're tromping across the beach at 2 in the morning). There is one night that I distinctly remember. The cool breeze carried the louder than usual sounds and taunting smells of the weekend our way. I was standing under a palm tree and had just set a PB & J next to a sleeping man. His skin was stretched across his fragile body, emphasizing his sunburned cheekbones and sunken eyes; had it not been for his snoring, I would have been convinced that he was dead. With a heavy sigh I looked across the street and my heart broke. Not for the man next to me, but for the ones across the street.  They had no idea what they were missing.


In their search for meaning and pleasure they were looking in the wrong place – or rather, on the wrong side of the street. As I fed, loved and listened to these people, I experienced the kind of pleasure that I think those across the street were looking for. The ones we fed were poor, dirty, smelly, often drunk, mostly lonely... and all of them made in the image of God. And I began to see that image more clearly. I began to see Jesus more clearly. I felt so privileged to be on the other side of South Beach.


There was one man in particular who God really used to inspire me to help launch what is now happening in Ft. Lauderdale. His name is Phil. When we met him he was holding a sign on the corner of a busy intersection in Miami Lakes. Over the next 6 months, our little group - of mostly poor college-age students - did everything we could to get him off the street; we pooled our money, bought him meals, let him sleep in our cars, paid for him to get his drivers license and countless other things. To be honest, it was sort of an experiment; could God really get a crack-addict off the street and transform his life? …And could he use a bunch of young, hopeful dreamers to do it?


Phil is now a strong believer, faithfully attends a church in Miami and has a wonderful ministry to the homeless out of his own home.  Walking through that transformation process with him did more in my heart than I realized; I saw for the first time that homeless people are just that: people. And that God can redeem their lives. For real.


At the time, I always carried bags of food (what we now refer to as "love bags") for the homeless in my car. We had proof that this whole redemption thing worked, a heart to help and a tangible thing that we could give to the homeless. So we dropped the PB & J's and launched love bags. And we discovered that we weren't the only ones with this heart – there were many, many others. 

The rest is history that is currently in the making.



Get Involved:


Pass Out a LoveBag!
Keep a LoveBag in your car and pass it out to a homeless person on the street, at an intersection, or while you’re waiting in traffic. And, since life on the street means the homeless probably don’t have a place to keep a piggy bank, it’s so much better than money.

Join or Start a Group.
People are relational. We need each other. Whether you’re homeless or whether you’re a volunteer, we all need someone to talk to. A LoveBag is a perfect way to start a conversation, and a opportunity to build a friendship. Find a meetup group in your area, or better yet, start one! Don’t worry, we’ve got tips to help along the way.  (email info@lovebags.org for more info)

Find a group on the LoveBag facebook fan page.








Find One Way Every Day on Facebook.
Help me spread the word about One Way Every Day. LIKE me on Facebook!



Source:  http://www.lovebags.org/
Japan Earthquake Relief

Shop My Zazzle Store


Make personalized gifts at Zazzle.