Last year, she helped found an orphanage

This past weekend, I met a woman who helped create an orphanage in Uganda last year. Seventy two total orphans, those who have no suitable mother or father, now live in a place with clean water. Seventy two beds are filled every night, seventy two bodies go off to school in the morning, and seventy two patients receive care from a nurse whenever they need it.

Much of this is to the credit of a single woman who spent an extra year after her two contracted years of Peace Corp service in Uganda.

blooming lenten rose flower

What did you do last year?

This news - the thought that someone I've known of for a long time opened an orphanage last year - spun my heart around a bit. Because what did I do last year? A whole lot of nothing in comparison.

My circulating heart hit a nerve that's been raw for awhile. It's the question of whether to live slow and intentionally or make big change.

There is a movement for people to slow down, to take in life and be fully present. I practice this philosophy very often. I cook from scratch every day, finding peace in peeling vegetables, whisking milk into pudding, and washing dish after dish after dish. I can experience beauty in cleaning windows and weeding. I focus on conversations with family and stories with Lil. These daily moments are fulfilling in their way.

But then I feel like I have it in me to do something bigger, to affect change in the huge needy world. I have dreams of starting a homestead school, an unschool resource space, and/or an organic farm. I am a passionate promoter of real, whole, local foods and I want to do something with this enthusiasm.

The rub comes when I try to manage the dreams and the present-ness.

The calendar fills with cooking classes, speaking at conferences, and invitations to do cool things that might make my dreams into reality. Normally slow family dinners are pushed aside so that I can run out the door to this meeting or that event. I become unable to concentrate on a teachable moment with Lil because I am mentally planning something else. Being present slips away.

I know I'm not the only stay at home parent who feels the pull of ideas and family. I've read that retirees and empty nest parents are similarly lost in the world. We have passions and ideas. But is potential success with something down the road worth sacrificing the enjoyment of the everyday?

I don't know. Do you? I need a mentor or an angel investor or a magic way to see in the future.

In the meantime, I will continue to learn about those who are changing the world in big ways. I'll be open to opportunity while trying to enjoy every moment of every day. It's all anyone can do.

Support Share Our Strength

Do you know about Share our Strength? It's an organization dedicated to feeding the hungry in America. They raise funds through donations and programs like the Great American Bake Sale and Taste of the Nation. Then, Share Our Strength distributes financial and programming support to organizations throughout the country that are addressing local hunger needs with nutritious food. Yahoo! has committed $20,000 to end hunger in America on behalf of the Foodbuzz community of publishers and readers, of which Hounds in the Kitchen is a part.

Readers have the opportunity to show your applause for this partnership by setting Yahoo! as your homepage by clicking on this link. Let them know you appreciate their gift to Share Our Strength by changing your homepage. Foodbuzz is asking all of us to raise awareness about this important cause by sharing the campaign on Facebook and Twitter.

I was pleased to talk to a local food organization this weekend who may be partnering with Share Our Strength soon. It's not my news to share but I support Share Our Strength even more knowing that they will be making change in my community.

'Tis The Season of GiveBack

The folks at One2One Network turned me on to a very cool site appropriate for the holiday season of giving: GiveBack.org.  The simple premise of this website is to make charitable giving easier. First, GiveBack users can create their own foundation from a huge variety of nonprofit organizations. The foundation I created benefits the Columbus Museum of Art, Slow Food International, Local Matters, Columbus Metropolitan Library and Capital Area Humane Society.  Register and $5 is instantly deposited in your account to give to your favorite charity.

Next, registrants can earn money towards their foundation by shopping through the GiveBack site.  The percentage donation varies per retailer, but over 400 stores have signed up including big names like Old Navy, Gaiam, and Staples.

Finally, you can contribute directly to GiveBack and disburse the money as you wish.  Adding funds is completed on a secure single screen.

As a bonus, GiveBack members can compete for a 'M Award' sponsored by MISSION founders Serena Williams and Steve Nash.  The M Award gives $1000 to the charity of a member with an inspiring story.

I have seen philanthropy concepts like this before but there always seems to be a catch.  So far, I can't find anything to dislike about GiveBack.  The money donated through GiveBack is turned over 100% to the charity with no surcharges.  (Non-intrusive sponsors cover the costs of operation.)  The site is professionally designed and I couldn't find a glitch among lots of surfing.  I gave funds in amounts as low as $1 to test flexibility for using this site with children who may want to split small donations several ways.

I plan to use GiveBack to manage my charitable donations this season.  How do you give during the holidays?

Blackboard and Benches to Help Haiti

I am writing for the newly formed Technorati Women's Channel. I will publish articles there about parenting, mothering, and non-food news. You can find all my technorati articles through my profile. This article is too important not to share both places. Article first published as Blackboards and Benches to Help Haiti on Technorati. The earth-quake ravaged country of Haiti never seems to leave the news. Starting in early November, pictures and accounts of the cholera outbreak filled the media. Last week, reports focused on the controversial Haitian election, now believed to be fundamentally sound.

With so much desperate news, it is easy to be bewildered by the overwhelming needs of the Haitian people.

That's how Columbus Ohio writer of Snapdragon Ink, Joanne Edmundson, felt after visiting Croix-des-Bouquets with the Ohio State University based Haiti Empowerment Project. Immediately upon her return, she mused about the difficulty of witnessing such poverty and relative wealth.

Read more about Joanne's simple solution.

Sharing the Harvest

At the beginning of the growing season, we committed to share 10% of our backyard garden harvest through the Garden Challenge.  This hasn't been easy because much of our harvest has been light so far.  We also don't want to share delicate items that might go bad at the food pantry. Today, though, we had plenty to give.  We picked four peppers, a bagful of kale and two squash and went over to the Clintonville Beechwold Community Resource Center.

lil donation

Lil was so proud she carried everything in herself.  It was adorable and I hope she's learning a very important lesson.

Join the Garden Challenge

Do you grow your own food?  How about sharing some with those who can't?  This isn't a new idea, but a group of gardeners is hosting a Garden Challenge this season on The Barnyard. We are still finalizing plans for this upcoming year.  We know what grew well last season and we will add enough plantings to give 10% of the harvest away.

Ours will go to the local settlement house, the Clintonville Beechwold Community Resource Center.  Less than a mile from our house, we already donate canned items and household goods to the CRC regularly.  I know they will appreciate fresh produce too.

Will you join us?