With Christmas approaching, if anyone wants to do some charity work, I'd like to recommend the Salvation Army's Angel Tree program. If you don't know, parents of little poor kids write down the kids' shoe size, coat size and other clothing sizes, and one need and one wish. These are then printed on cards that are placed on Christmas trees around the city, and strangers get to buy them toys and/or clothes. I did two three month volunteer projects for them (got to meet the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders; they're really pretty in person).
After all the toys have been purchased, the families come in to receive their gifts. I was interested in seeing if they would be 'career welfarists' or just poor folks down on their luck (you could totally tell). I'd say 95% were just plain poor, and anyway even if they were career welfarists, you were getting toys for the kids who wouldn't have much of a Christmas without them.
One of the things we hadn't told them, and they weren't expecting, was a gift certificate for $10 worth of food. You couldn't buy booze, lottery tickets or tobacco. Just $10 worth of food, and that made a lot of people cry. $10 worth of fucking food at Christmas. You know those kids didn't get to eat every day.
We weren't supposed to adopt Angels ourselves, but every one of us broke that rule. I adopted two little boys, who both had the same need: blankets. They also had the same want: blankets. We hooked them up. At my location, we had mainly single black females and Mexicans. You saw some interesting names. One of the best was Ifeanichukwu, no clue what nationality that dude is. There were also two brothers named Einstein and Spanky. The best however, was some little black kid named Asswad. You'd think the nurses would have told the mother.
Anyway, sorry for the long post, but if you want to do some volunteer work this Christmas, I can heartily recommend the Angel Tree program.
Dave
After all the toys have been purchased, the families come in to receive their gifts. I was interested in seeing if they would be 'career welfarists' or just poor folks down on their luck (you could totally tell). I'd say 95% were just plain poor, and anyway even if they were career welfarists, you were getting toys for the kids who wouldn't have much of a Christmas without them.
One of the things we hadn't told them, and they weren't expecting, was a gift certificate for $10 worth of food. You couldn't buy booze, lottery tickets or tobacco. Just $10 worth of food, and that made a lot of people cry. $10 worth of fucking food at Christmas. You know those kids didn't get to eat every day.
We weren't supposed to adopt Angels ourselves, but every one of us broke that rule. I adopted two little boys, who both had the same need: blankets. They also had the same want: blankets. We hooked them up. At my location, we had mainly single black females and Mexicans. You saw some interesting names. One of the best was Ifeanichukwu, no clue what nationality that dude is. There were also two brothers named Einstein and Spanky. The best however, was some little black kid named Asswad. You'd think the nurses would have told the mother.
Anyway, sorry for the long post, but if you want to do some volunteer work this Christmas, I can heartily recommend the Angel Tree program.
Dave