OUR MISSION & METHODOLOGY

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Connections


Her elderly face bore the marks of a tough life.  She was doing her job, standing in the mall food court handing out Bourbon Chicken samples to passersby.  She would have looked much more at home on the streets of China.  I even imagined her following her entrepreneur children to America to live with them and work with them in their business.  Her expression was one of silent resignation.  She was there in body, but not in spirit. 

The next moment her air shifted dramatically, from boredom to engagement.  Her “inner light” came on.  She was trying to catch someone’s eye in the crowd.  She was virtually reaching out with her body language, trying to make a connection.  Then I saw the subject of her gaze – a young mother, also of Asian descent, with her toddler.  I could see the elderly woman’s desire to speak a kindness, to reassure the younger woman that she knew all about her current life stage and share some motherly wisdom.  She made two or three almost desperate attempts to make eye contact to no avail.  The young mother, absorbed in trailing her toddler, never even knew she was there.  She passed back into the crowd as the older woman’s light faded back to gray.

Our need for human connection is universal, even among strangers.  We all share an underlying need to be known and to be safe.  In public it appears as the involuntary expression on another’s face that you have undoubtedly seen as I have, the one that silently says, “Tell me I am alright.”  Among our friends and family the words can seem very casual (“Wanna grab cup of coffee some time?”, “Play with me”, “How was your day?”, or “What’s up dude?”) but the need for a true connection is the same.  These moments are fleeting and fragile.  Unless we are paying attention, we will miss most of them.  What might it look like if we took the time to really see the stranger, to listen below the words of our loved ones, to have the love and patience to always communicate grace and safety by our words and actions?

Throughout this journey, Julie and I have been blessed to build relationships with some amazing people who are all unique, but share one thing in common: they each have a history of incarceration.  Some are struggling through the challenges of reentry.  Others are still incarcerated, looking with hope toward the day they get their chance to walk free again.  Throughout February, we would like to introduce you to some of these men.  Please like our Facebook page here to follow their stories, connect with them, and learn about the challenges they have faced or will face in reentering society after incarceration. 

Peace,

art


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It’s (Nearly) Official
We have begun the 501c3 non-profit application process.  We remain under Perception Funding which is a local organization that helps launch other ministries.  Well it’s time to take the training wheels off and go it on our own.  Becoming our own 501c3 will give us access to a broader range of foundation and public grants.  It also communicates clearly that we are here to stay and invested in long-term sustainability.  If all goes as planned, we should have our 501c3 status by mid- to late-summer.  In the meantime your donation is still tax deductible.