Here come the holidays. I've already got my Thanksgiving plans made,
including where I am going and what I am cooking. I'm working out what
to do at Christmas. Some people I know already have their trees up and
decorated. Others are ticking off how many gift-buying days remain. A
lady told me the other day that she's already done shopping
and
wrapping. Wow.
With the holidays comes that special wave of
giving. This is, for me, what helps to offset the shopping frenzy and
the multitude of things attached to Christmas that have nothing to do
with Christ at all: in the holiday season,
people want to give. We look beyond ourselves. The "haves" think of the "have-nots" and look for ways to be a blessing.
I
sort of always knew this, but I experienced it at a whole other level
last Christmas at the shelter where I worked. Monetary donations took
a sudden jump. People showed up at the door daily, their arms laden
with things they thought we might need. Callers wanted to adopt
families. Groups looked for creative ways to bless our clients.
Entire carloads of groceries were hauled through our doors.
The
generosity of people was a huge encouragement. Working in a Domestic
Violence Shelter means knowing on an intimate basis the horror of what
people do to each other behind closed doors. It means watching people
hurt, and stumble, and struggle to understand. It means telling
sobbing callers that we're full today, just like all the other
shelters, but maybe we'll have space another day. It means practicing
the art of not flinching when the person talking shares something that
makes you want to run screaming from the room. But as much as the
horrors of the clients' lives chipped away at my faith in the human
race, the wonder of faithful donors revived hope in me that compassion
still exists. If you are someone who donates time, money or resources
to help those less fortunate, thank you and bless you - you
are making a difference in the world today.
But
sometimes dealing with donors is a whole lot of helping people feel
good about helping, when the way they are helping creates more work and
more waste in an already burdened system. Receiving donations means
smiling, being gracious, saying thank you, and not trying to correct
this problem, because some donors will simply stop giving if you offend
them with your suggestions. Since today I don't represent anyone but
myself, please allow me to make a few suggestions this giving season.
1.
Your perfectly good shirt with just one stain or one little
hole...well, it still has a stain or hole. Maybe a starving person in
Africa would be glad to have a stained or holey shirt - I don't know,
since I've never worked with starving people in Africa. But here in
the States, unstained, intact items can be bought for a quarter apiece
at goodwill stores. Used clothing is not a scarce item here. Keep it
for a painting shirt, cut it up and use it for rags, or toss it in the
garbage. Donating it simply means someone at the other end has to make
the decision to pitch it. Please don't clog up the system like that;
most of the people working that system make minimum wage and have given
up hope on ever actually getting "caught up" on the work of sorting
through all that stuff.
2. Do the laundry before you pass it
on. Items that look dirty, smell bad, or are full of pet hair are not
going to be used. Non-profit organizations are, by their nature,
understaffed and overworked. There is not a nice lady who washes up
your garbage bag of not-quite-clean clothing for the poor folks.
3.
Fashion is not completely dead, even amongst the homeless. This means
the stuff that is too hopelessly outdated for you is not going to
appeal to them either. Put it up on ebay as "retro" or something.
Homeless people aren't asking for $100 jeans or even brand new stuff,
but they also don't want to look like they just walked out of their
grandma's closet, you know?
4. Shelters and missions have to
answer to health inspectors. This means they cannot serve expired
foods. Most of us understand that the green beans that were good on
July 31st are still good on August 2nd, even if the can says they
expired August 1st. We know there's not a little bacteria bomb waiting
to be detonated inside the can on the date stamped on top. BUT health
inspectors have to enforce rules. If you'll take a second to check the
expiration dates on food you're pulling out of your cupboard to donate,
you'll save everyone some time. When receiving a huge food donation
means pitching one third of the items into the dumpster because they
expired two years ago...well...that's not a very efficient usage of
staff time and energy, right?
5. Cooking in a shelter or
mission means trying to please people en masse. As for me, I love to
try new foods and cook strange things in my own home (my son STILL
complains about my Indian cooking phase and that was something like
five years ago!) But anything that might seem "exotic" is probably not
going to get used in a shelter setting. Stick to basics. If you want
to do something really special, bring fresh fruits and vegetables,
milk, juice, or some kind of better-quality meat. Almost no one
donates that sort of thing. Do check in with the shelter first and
make sure someone else didn't just have the same idea; ten people can't
eat twenty pounds of lettuce before it goes bad.
6. "Peanut
butter and jelly are good enough for my house, and by golly they had
better be good enough for poor people!" I've heard that said more than
once and I kind of agreed with it. Apparently lots of people think
so. The organization you're supporting probably has more than enough
peanut butter and jelly, based on my experience.
7. As far as
groceries go, keep this in mind: often, shelters and missions have
access to food banks, where they can purchase food "by the pound" at
discounts that far surpass anything the average citizen has ever
experienced. The $10 you spend at your local grocery store would go a
lot further at the food bank. If your heart is not totally set on
choosing the items yourself, consider just giving the money. If you
don't want to give just the money because you need to control how it's
spent, carefully think through these two questions: A) Is this about
what I want, or is it about being a blessing? and B) If I can't trust
this organization to spend the money wisely, why exactly am I
supporting them?
8. Some of the items most frequently needed
are extremely unglamorous. Community living generates a tremendous
need for toilet paper, paper towels, and garbage bags. Not exactly
"feel-good" items. But you'll do a great service by giving them.
9.
On a feminine hygiene note (everybody say "ewwww"), donors like to give
pads, but clients prefer tampons. I don't know "why" on either end.
Just factor that in, please.
10. Sample-size shampoo and
conditioner seems like such a nice thing to give. I get that. I
thought it was a GREAT idea before I worked in a shelter. They get
massive amounts of that stuff - lots of people think it's a great
idea. Here's the thing: regular-size items are more convenient and
get chosen first. Which means the samples get stockpiled. Once upon a
time I brought home some bottles from the massive surplus we had, and I
quickly discovered that my hair was a disaster when I used them. I
don't know why; it's not exactly like I'm a highly discriminating hair
product shopper. I use the cheap stuff. But the cheap stuff in
regular bottles works better than anything I found in sample bottles
(and I tried several different varieties.) Yeah, my hair was still
CLEAN and yeah, that should be the thing that matters most. I'm just
saying - sample sizes are not as great an idea as we think they might
be.
11. People under stress have a lot of headache and pain
issues. Pain relievers of all sorts are needed all the time. Tylenol,
Advil, Excedrin, Aleve, generics of all of these, kids' versions of
them - you can't go wrong donating these. Just check the expiration
date first.
12. One of the nicest ways to give is to call and
ask what is needed. You can often meet an emergency need that you'd
never have anticipated - God works that way. Tell them what you have
to spend and let them shoot you some ideas. It blesses everyone all
the way around.
13. A lot of people want to give directly to
shelters or missions rather than to a goodwill or Salvation Army store
because they don't like the notion of poor people getting charged for
their goods. I love the heart of that thought. I do. But let's get
practical for a moment. Sometimes the shelter or mission needs your
clothes or other various household items, but sometimes they are
overstocked and they don't have one more inch of storage space. Those
stores do incur some expenses to warehouse the items they are selling -
imagine their cost for maintaining the building, heating it, and paying
staff. Often the stores offer voucher programs to shelters or
missions, so that clients who are getting their own places can shop
there for free. Ask. And on a let's-get-real level, it was my
experience that the vast majority of homeless clients found the
resources to get cigarettes. If they can manage that, they can go to
the goodwill store on Quarter Day and spend fifty cents on an entire
outfit. Right?
14. Giving money is vastly underrated.
People don't want to "just write checks." Meanwhile, shelters and
missions are getting grants that can only be used for improving the
building, or can only be used for programming...and they just need to
pay the heat bill and meet payroll. Writing a check is
not a
lesser option, no matter the size of the check. Send a nice note with
the check. Make it a regular monthly commitment, even if it's only a
few bucks. Write the check and know you are a blessing.
15.
Want to volunteer? Be patient. Call and offer. Don't be frustrated
when you have to fill out paperwork. Be willing to do what's needed,
and not just the one thing you think would be a good idea. Much of
what's needed is not glamorous at all. It's still a blessing.
16.
Most of all, when you give, start with the fact that it's not about
you. The needs might not be in the area you prefer to give. If staff
is overly taxed, you might not get the recognition and effusive
gratitude you expect for your efforts. The people you are trying to
bless might be ungrateful or unlovely sometimes. If your gift comes
with strings attached like "you must present yourselves as worthy of my
efforts/time/money," or "you must be glad to get whatever I offer,"
then someone is probably going to come out unhappy. It's not about
you. When you get a handle on that, you'll be free and you'll be a
blessing.
Just a bit of wisdom from one who knows. May something here help you, as you are
helping others this holiday season.
Karen Swank has tried her hand at all sorts of things in life, including working at a Domestic Violence Shelter for a year and a half. She recently joined the ranks of the unemployed, and is looking forward to experiencing the next adventure.
It is good to have some decent guidelines to this type of giving.
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