Ben Robb is a valued friend and colleague of mine at the mission. Over a lot of hard-earned caffeine, I found that I really enjoy Ben's insights and passion. Today, I hope you will too. (Go get 'em, Ben!!)
"We
have to let you go ..."
What would you do if you and your spouse
both lost your jobs today?
I suppose you'd feel stressed. You'd
pray, perhaps. You'd certainly spruce up the resumes.
And then you'd call people. People you
trust. People who care about you, want the best for you, would watch for new
opportunities and mention your name.
You'd activate your network ... And
you'd probably be just fine.
Positive relationships are easy to take
for granted--building them comes naturally to most of us. But imagine if all
your friends were living below the poverty line. Imagine that many of them were
looking for work, too. Imagine that they all lived in small apartments, that
none of them had a spare bedroom.
Then what would you do if you and your
spouse both lost your jobs?
Imagining life with a different set of
relationships makes it easier to see why approximately
800 single mothers are currently living with their children in their cars in
the Pikes Peak Region, doesn't it?
You may have read Sarah's story in our
recent newsletter (if not, get caught up here)--until recently, she was one of those
homeless single mothers. She's also Springs Rescue Mission's first participant
in a new program we're calling the Family Mentor Alliance. Here's the concept
in a nutshell:
What
we're doing to help
Homeless
families have a short-term need: shelter. We're currently in the process of developing a safe place
specifically for families with children--more on this in another post.
Homeless
families have two primary long term needs if they are to avoid ending up on the streets (or in their
cars) again--education and relationships.
We seek to meet their long term needs through
the Family Mentor Alliance by matching them in a mentoring relationship with
members of a local congregation. Our goal for all of the families we work with
is self-reliance.
When I met Sarah, she was several months
into her time in the family Mentor Alliance and was preparing to move out of
transitional housing and into her own place. Committing to a rent payment for
the first time in years, she was understandably stressed about the move. But
her mentors were helping her.
Honest help doesn't always feel good.
Sarah told me about arguing with these folks because the place she originally
picked out was over budget. Together, they adjusted expectations and found
something smaller, something sustainable. She told me about crying in her
living room because her mentors were pushing her not to try to squeeze all of
her stuff into the new space, which was smaller than her transitional housing,
too.
These guys fought. They cried. They built real relationships--long
term relationships. And Sarah has finally
gained some positive momentum for herself and her children.
Why
this matters to me
Sarah's mentors are faithfully walking
her through a wonderful spiritual curriculum and investing in her family in
numerous ways. But it's the everyday stuff that makes all the difference in the
long run. It's the positive relationships that matter.
I've worked for a few different
non-profits over the last 11 years. Some of them have had a difficult time
quantifying their long term outcomes. In my experience, the reason has been
that the organization didn't build long term relationships. They might talk
about reaching an inordinate number of hurting people (reach is a media term),
but they haven't invested the months or years that it takes to walk people through the meaningful and
sometimes mundane decisions that actually get lives back on track. And
there's nothing more important.
Why
it should matter to you, too
You give money to non-profits every
year. If you're funding folks whose aim it is to get lives back on track, make
sure they develop long term relationships with the people they're helping,
whether it's through counseling, casework, or education. There's no substitute for long term, positive relationships.
If you want to help a family, a
neighbor, a coworker, or the guy panhandling on your street corner, develop the
relationship. There's no substitute for
you.
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