Totally bragging (for a good cause)

I know we all have our favorite charities and causes we choose to support. I am very privileged to have an inside view of Global Links, a Pittsburgh-based nonprofit that sends surplus medical equipment and supplies donated by hospitals and companies in this country to needy hospitals and clinics in Latin America. It keeps these still-useful supplies from ending up in a landfill and meets an incredible need for even the most basic medical goods in the developing world.

For example, did you know:

  • Before you can have surgery in some countries you have to bring your own suture, and that suture can cost as much as you might make in a month. (In this country, unused suture is often discarded. Once it has been laid out for surgery, and its outer wrapping removed, it cannot be reused, even though it is still wrapped and sterile.)
  • Mattresses are at a premium. Sometimes patients must share a bed, or a mattress on the floor, or lie on the floor itself.
  • “Disposable” gloves are often carefully washed and reused, over and over.
  • Women may travel for miles and miles to give birth in the region’s only hospital or clinic. When they arrive, they must often deliver in their street clothes because there are no gowns or linens (some patients bring their own linens, if they are able).

What do I mean by “surplus”? Well, hospitals change out their equipment, tools, and furnishings all the time. They might choose to use a different vendor’s equipment, or a different type of needle/syringe. They exchange mattresses and beds for newer ones. They basically try to provide state-of-the-art everything, because in this country, that’s what’s expected. It doesn’t mean the materials they’re swapping aren’t still useful — they are useful, and desperately needed in other countries. Even things like chairs for waiting patients or cabinets to hold supplies, or crutches, wheelchairs, soap (!), even paint — so much need and so much in this country that goes to waste.

There’s much more to the story — and I can’t do it justice here (www.globallinks.org is a good place to learn more). But I’m excited that this year marks Global Links’ 20th anniversary! Twenty years (that went by in a flash) and 3,000 tons of surplus worth $140 million distributed. And it all began around a kitchen table as a true start-up by three “founding mothers.”

As I mentioned, I have an insider view of Global Links. Why? Because one of those founding mothers is my sister, now Global Links’ executive director. Yep, the same “big sister” who sang to me when I was little…the green-thumb/great cook who taught me everything I know about gardening and cooking (and eating? she taught me the proper way to hold a knife and fork)…the perennial fixer-upper who can’t pick a paint color to save her life… and the only one of us who is almost never on time for anything…is also a world-travelin’, make-it-happen humanitarian who is making a difference for thousands of people and the planet.

She recently gave an interview to Her Startup, LLC. Check it out if you want to learn a little more about this homegrown nonprofit success story. And please forgive my bragging — as I said, it’s for a good cause.

No one should die for lack of what others throw away. (SM)
~ Global Links’ tagline

Toast, ginger ale, and BBC America

I relapsed into cold/flu miserableness two days ago. Today marks 2 weeks since the whole thing started. In that time, I’ve:

  • Consumed more toast and “green tea”  ginger ale than I have in the last 2 years
  • Discovered, for the first time, BBC America’s quirky daytime programming, featuring: people who try to find treasures amid the Trash in the Attic (if only); people who try to find bargains at a flea market and resell them for a profit at auction (they almost never do); two plucky British ladies who clean up the filthiest houses you have ever seen and can’t believe people would live there let alone allow it to be filmed; a hotelier who goes into troubled inns and B & B’s and helps the owners turn them around (very interesting — who hasn’t thought about running a B&B?), and the invariably foul-mouthed chef, Gordon Ramsay, who, in two different programs, tries to turn around failing restaurants and runs his own restaurant (“The F Word”), training newbies in the process.
  • Dosed myself, at various times, with 6 different OTC meds
  • Gone through 2 boxes of lotion-infused tissue — and counting
  • Missed at least 4 days work (it’s times like these I’m especially glad I don’t have to report to a real office)
  • Infected my husband, who perhaps reinfected me?

I’m sure this too shall pass. But until it does, I’m one miserable wench. And my house is a wreck — maybe I’ll have to rethink the British cleaning ladies. (Is it better to die of embarrassment or dirt?)

Spring is not the best of seasons.
Cold and flu are two good reasons;
wind and rain and other sorrow,
warm today and cold tomorrow.
Whoever said Spring was romantic?
The word that best applies is frantic!
~ Author unknown

It’s Tea Time!

A few months ago, I attended my first political rally. Just two days ago (April 11), I attended my first political protest: Pittsburgh’s Tea Party. (Actually, Pittsburgh’s first Tea Party. Another is scheduled on April 15 at noon in Market Square downtown.)

If you haven’t heard, the Tea Party movement is spreading across the country (see how many places here) in tribute to the Boston Tea Party and its protest against excessive taxation. Tea Party-goers are against the profligate, wasteful spending of our hard-earned tax dollars by an overblown government out of touch with the people who hired it. Supporting the Tea Party Movement is not about being a Democrat or a Republican — it’s about being a citizen who:

  • Is tired of billions upon billions of dollars being spent in legislation our elected officials can’t even be bothered to read
  • Believes in the individual freedoms and responsibilities upon which our Founding Fathers built this nation
  • Wants less government not more
  • Is fed up seeing the fruits of his or her labor “redistributed” and our children’s future ransomed with debt

So, Mike and I were happy to join two or three thousand other folks near Pittsburgh’s Allegheny River under a glorious blue sky to practice our civil liberties. (Tellingly, the only TV report we saw said “hundreds” of people in typically biased fashion; other newspaper reports more accurately placed the attendance anywhere from 2,000 to 4,000.)

Dr. Alan Keyes, constitutional scholar and former ambassador to the United Nations under President Reagan, was the very articulate and inspiring keynote speaker. My favorite quote from his speech, which you can watch here:

If the thing is right, then you stand for it. And you don’t wait until someone else comes along beside, because the heart that maintains liberty is not the heart of the herd, but the heart of the individual. This country was built by those who understood that the wilderness could not be opened except  by those who are willing to venture forth alone if need be. That the new idea could not be explored, the new invention could not be created except by those who are willing to break new paths of understanding. And we must understand that no herd will save this country if we are not willing to stand alone if we must for the sake of its liberty.

By the way, he spoke extemporaneously — no teleprompters or even notes.

Here are some views of the day. Loved the signs. Loved the enthusiasm. Loved seeing as many people younger than ourselves as older. Loved knowing that we are not alone in our beliefs.

Pittsburghers love our Steelers and our homes.

illpayformyhouse

We believe in the free workings of capitalism.

freemarkets

We are who we are — it’s a ‘Burgh thing.

yinz-jag-offs

Dr. Alan Keyes

alankeyes

It certainly is time.

itsteatime

It’s time to stand for what our forefathers stood for.

teabag

Thanks to organizer (and ordinary citizen) Robert Baehr and his Web site www.pennsylvaniateaparty.com. If you agree, scatter some tea — actually or proverbially — in your own life.

At the end of the day, there is only one sure bulwark of liberty:
that is the self-discipline, self-government, faith, piety, and
responsibility of every single individual who wishes to be free.
~ Dr. Alan Keyes
speaking at the Pittsburgh Tea Party
April 11, 2009

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