October: 31 Days to Support the Nonprofit Community.

One element of living well is lending a hand to those in need. By supporting nonprofits in your community, you can join efforts to strengthen community and improve the lives of those going through a rough time. Some friends and neighbors have chronic needs and some find themselves in a position they never imagined: seeking and accepting help to deal with a short-term crisis.

Check out nonprofits in your area that provide services to those who could benefit from a helping hand. I’ve listed 31 nonprofits below (along with a link to their websites); some are affiliated with national organizations, so you might find a similar organization in your world. Others might be more specific to the Portland, Maine area. In any event, there is no shortage of opportunity to boost someone’s spirits by making a donation of your time or dollars.

31 Nonprofits Doing Good Work to Strengthen Community

  1. Caring Unlimited – working with the community to end domestic violence in York County.
  2. Center for Grieving Children – provides loving support that encourages the safe expression of grief and loss and fosters each individual’s resilience and emotional well-being.
  3. Cromwell Center – promotes safe, respectful and inclusive schools and communities.
  4. Day One – improves the health of Maine by providing substance use, mental health and wellness services to youth and families.
  5. Furniture Friends – Creating Homes. Rebuilding Lives.
  6. Girl Scouts of Maine– builds girls of courage, confidence, and character who make the world a better place.
  7. Girls on the Run – inspires girls to be joyful, healthy and confident, using a fun, experienced-based curriculum which creatively integrates running.
  8. Good Shepherd Food Bank – eliminates hunger in Maine by sourcing and distributing nutritious food to people in need, building strong community partnerships, and mobilizing the public in the fight to end hunger.
  9. Grahamtastic Connection – connecting kids when their world is out of reach.
  10. Holocaust and Human Rights Center of Maine – promotes universal respect for human rights through outreach and education.
  11. Iris Network – helping people who are visually impaired or blind attain independence and community integration.
  12. Junior Achievement of Maine – inspires and prepares young people to succeed in a global economy.
  13. Maine Association of Nonprofits – enriches the quality of community and personal life in Maine by strengthening the leadership, voice, and organizational effectiveness of our state’s nonprofits.
  14. Maine Inside Out – initiates dialogue, develops leadership, and builds community across boundaries with collaborative original theater, inside and outside correctional facilities.
  15. Maine Youth Leadership – works with Maine youth to seek out, recognize, and develop their leadership skills.
  16. Make-A-Wish Maine – serves a unique, and vital, role in helping strengthen and empower children battling critical illnesses.
  17. My Place Teen Center – provides a safe haven for youth, ages 10 – 18, sustaining them with comfort, meals, resources, and hope.
  18. Pets for Vets – heal the emotional wounds of military veterans by using the power of the human-animal bond.
  19. Portland Wheelers – giving the gift of bicycling – or adaptive tricycling – to people living with significant disabilities.
  20. Preble Street – provides accessible barrier-free services to empower people experiencing problems with homelessness, housing, hunger, and poverty, and to advocate for solutions to these problems.
  21. Purple Iris Foundation – raises awareness, provides support, and gives hope to individuals and families affected by cancer.
  22. Riding to the Top – helps people with disabilities reach their highest potential through the healing power of horses.
  23. Robbie Foundation – improves the quality of life for children with special needs.
  24. Simple Gifts – provides limited financial support and encouragement to patients and their loved ones who are experiencing a medical crisis.
  25. Strive – serving tweens, teens and young adults with intellectual and emotional disabilities.
  26. Through These Doors (formerly Family Crisis Center) – creates innovate responses and mobilizes our community to provide safety and challenge systems of oppression and violence.
  27. United Ways of Maine – improving people’s lives by mobilizing community caring and resources.
  28. WinterKids – helps children develop healthy, lifelong habits through education and fun, outdoor winter activity.
  29. Women United Around the World – celebrating, advocating and assisting women locally and globally to achieve independence through vocational training and community connections.
  30. Woodford Family Services – committed to the support and inclusion of people with special needs and their families in Maine communities.
  31. York County Shelter Programs – committed to ending homelessness and assisting people to reach their fullest potential.

Need a few more ideas? No problem:

  • Connect with an organization like 100+ Women Who Care, Southern Maine that can introduce you to a variety of nonprofits.
  • There’s a library in every town that could use your help.
  • Rotary Clubs are in many towns doing a variety of local and international service projects.
  • Food pantries in community after community would welcome your input.
  • Call your town hall or connect with your school department to find out what needs are specific to your town.

Use my birthday month of October to investigate the world of nonprofits. Step in and see how viewing the world through that nonprofit lens impacts you, as well as the nonprofit(s) you choose to assist. Do you have more energy? Do you feel happier as you boost the day of others around you? Do you feel more engaged as you learn all that’s happening in your community? Let me know how 31 days of October affect you.

Live Well. Eat Well. Be Well.

October: 31 Days to Support the Nonprofit Community. was last modified: October 1st, 2018 by Deb Nelson

From Hope to Action: What Will You Do?

Sunday afternoon, my husband and a friend of ours planned to go to the movies. Luckily for us, there was only one seat left. We were forced to move on to Plan B – and, oh my goodness, Plan B turned into quite an adventure.

We had read that there was an exhibit of Arthur Fink’s photos from his visit to Auschwitz and Birkenau at the Maine Jewish Museum. We hopped into the car and were on our way.

Words cannot convey the power of Arthur’s photos. He selected 21 photos for this exhibit titled Auschwitz: Images of Resilience and Light. The photos reflect Arthur’s (successful) attempt to share images “that suggest hope, possibility, and positive vision.” The photos in the exhibit include:

A barbed wire fence

Tracks leading to Birkenau

Barracks at Birkenau

Children’s shoes

A picture drawn by an adult that included text that when roughly translated means “I love you, children.”

The photo accompanying this post is titled Tree of Life which Arthur believes is “a symbol of vibrant new growth that can arise even in this shadow of the Holocaust . . . a fitting end to an exhibition in a synagogue whose name, ‘Etz Chaim’, means ‘Tree of Life.’

Each of these sobering images meets Arthur’s belief of suggesting hope, possibility, and positive vision. These images – individually and collectively – tell the story of the unimaginable and dare us to do better, be better, and honor those whose lives were turned upside down – both the survivors and those who lost their lives in the Holocaust.

From the moment we set foot in the museum, conversations were brewing. There was a buzz throughout the museum. Jack Montgomery’s work was also a featured exhibit titled Soul Survivors: Legacy of the Holocaust. Jack’s exhibit included portraits of Holocaust survivors who settled in Maine along with excerpts of their oral testimonies. These powerful stories were a perfect complement to Arthur’s images.

As we viewed photos and read the stories of Holocaust survivors, VOICES Boston performed a variety of songs that served to lighten the mood and foster conversation – serving another of Arthur’s goals: “these images and whatever conversations they stimulate, will help viewers explore together how we can create a constructive personal relation with the Holocaust.”

Conversation is powerful; and Arthur encourages people to ask questions, even difficult questions – okay, perhaps especially difficult questions. Conversation connects us; conversation gives us the opportunity to confirm the accuracy (or inaccuracy) of our understanding of a situation. Conversation lets us find common ground and explore our differences.

Arthur and Jack’s exhibits explore a heavy subject and show us that after unspeakable sorrow and tragedy, hope remains. Hope lives in each of us; we just need to decide what action we will take so that hope remains meaningful. The museum’s decision to bring the talented VOICES Boston program to the museum was a wise one. The youthful voices of the members of the chorus radiated warmth and hope throughout the building.

Lessons from taking our Plan B route to the Maine Jewish Museum:

Look at the past.

Let the past guide or influence your future.

Do not let the past dictate your future.

Ask questions.

Ask simple questions.

Ask difficult questions.

Have an uncomfortable discussion.

Keep your discussions civil.

Where there is hope, there is a possibility for a brighter tomorrow.

There is always hope.

Living well takes many forms. Taking the time to explore a museum, listen to music, walk through your town, or explore a new area encourages looking at the world through a new lens.

Thank you, Arthur, for sharing these images and for reminding us of the power of hope.

 

From Hope to Action: What Will You Do? was last modified: January 17th, 2018 by Deb Nelson