pegkerr: (Default)
This was fun, pleased my inner kindergardener, and took about fifteen minutes flat to make. Materials: coffee stir sticks, coffee cup, coffee creamer container, file card, tape, paper clip, dental floss, thumb tack. Whee!





From the back:





One of my coworkers stopped to admire it, and suggested I speak with my employer about funding this project as one of their larger charitable projects for the year. I'd already submitted the paperwork for them to match my $50 kick off contribution, but if I could get them to kick in a larger amount, that would be terrific. I've downloaded the press kit which I'll give them to help persuade.

MyCharityWater Campaign Report:
$5,000 CAMPAIGN GOAL
$345 RAISED SO FAR
17 people served
11 donations
88 days left

I'm still mulling over ideas about how I can draw attention to the campaign, to persuade people to contribute (without making myself a pain in the ass, I mean). I'm soliciting ideas. More on this later.
pegkerr: (Default)
This year, the mission trip is going to be blogging about the experience. The first post, about the trip preparations, is up. Follow along and you'll catch glimpses of Fiona and Delia as they work with the children of Casa Hogar Elim.

Here's a video that another church group who went down there made about the orphanage and children.




MyCharityWater Campaign Report:
$5,000 CAMPAIGN GOAL
$165 RAISED SO FAR
8 people served
7 donations
91 days left
What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (Default)
Next month is my fiftieth birthday.

I'm not quite sure exactly how I'm going to celebrate it, but one thing's for sure: I certainly don't need presents. I don't need more stuff. If there's anything the past couple years have taught me, it's to be grateful for what I already have.

As you know, I've also been thinking a lot in the past couple years about what I can do to make the world a better place. I've been following a lot of nonprofits on Twitter, and one of them particularly caught my attention: Charity:Water (@charitywater on Twitter).

Today is World Water Day. Did you know that a billion people don't have access to clean drinking water? That's about one out of eight. In three years, Charity:Water has sent $10 million dollars into the field to implement 2,321 water projects in 16 developing countries. That's over a million people served. Charity:Water makes it possible for people to set up their own fundraising pages, and they suggest that people donate their birthdays to the cause. I've been thinking about this idea for a number of months, and today's being World Water Day gave me the push to actually do it.

My own MyCharity:Water page is here. If I can raise $5,000, that will build a freshwater well in a village, which can provide 250+ people with clean drinking water. This campaign begins today, on World Water Day, and will last for three months, as individual MyCharity:Water campaigns do. 100% of the money that you donate at my MyCharity:Water page will go to actually fund the well (Charity:Water uses other funds to cover their administrative costs). The Mycharity:Water site Will track every dollar donated on my page to a specific water project. When the water project this campaign has helped fund is completed in 12 - 18 months from end of this campaign, Charity:Water will contact me and everyone who contributed to my campaign and send us pictures and the GPS coordinates of the new well this money raised. If we manage to raise the entire $5,000, there will be a plaque commemorating my campaign mounted at the well itself.

So I hope you'll consider giving a donation, whether $5 or $10 or even $50 for my fiftieth birthday. I've kicked off the campaign with a $50 contribution of my own. Charity:Water is a 501(c)3 corporation, so if you are in the United States, your contribution is tax deductible.* If you have any ideas or suggestions of what I might do to raise money for this campaign, I would welcome them in comments to this post. Many thanks.



*While Charity:Water can accept Paypal donations if they're made to the organization in general, if you want to contribute specifically to my campaign for my fiftieth birthday, they are set up to take contributions via credit card or check only. Either way, as I said, your contribution would be tax deductible.

Several nice pictures Delia took of me for my campaign page )


What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (Default)
Check out http://act.ly for an interesting new approach for social and political activism. Anyone with a Twitter account can create a petition, urging anyone else with a Twitter account to do something. I'm following The Innocence Project on Twitter (@innocenceblog), and this tweet caught my eye:
TX execution set for 3/24 despite untested DNA. Petition @GovernorPerry to stop the execution http://act.ly/1tr
Curious, I clicked on the link, which took me to the http://act.ly site, where I found a page with information about a pending death penalty case. All I had to do was to re-tweet, and my tweet lands in Governor Perry's tweet in-basket. And the governor, if he likes, can reply via http://act.ly. Curious, I did a little poking around the site. I found, for example, a petition urging Rick Warren to speak out against the pending law in Uganda that would put homosexuals to death. Rick Warren responded to the tweet and posted a video message he sent out to Ugandan pastors, urging them against supporting the bill.

The application was invented by @slowdive and @jgilliam, in order to, as they put it, shake up a political system that's broken.

What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (Default)
The artist's name is Kseniya Simonova. Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] elisem and [livejournal.com profile] papersky for the link. As Elise says, I love finding art that I didn't know about, and I love even more finding out that there is a kind of art-making that I had never imagined.




What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (Default)
I feel like I've been off my stride on the Decrease Worldsuck Project (sorry for those of you who wince at that name, but I'm sticking with it for now). I haven't recorded anything for an embarrassingly long time. Now I've found another woman's project which raised my embarrassment level even higher. I feel like a real slacker in comparison.

Her name is Betty Londergan (@blondergan on Twitter--why on earth doesn't she have more followers??) and she's started a blog called What Gives (which I've syndicated at Livejournal as [livejournal.com profile] whatgives365 and at Dreamwidth as [syndicated profile] whatgives365_feed where she blogs about the project she's doing this year: she's going to give away $100 a day for a year, choosing to promote projects that make the world a better place.

Yesterday, for example, she highlighted a project call Global Cycle Solutions (on Twitter as @GlobalCycleSoln. The concept behind Global Cycle Solutions is to take the 1 billion bicycles in the world and put them to work for something besides pedaling around. Started in Cambridge, Massachusetts by a group of MIT engineers and brainiacs, GCS’s blinding flash of brilliance was to design a universal adaptor that allows bikes to do anything from processing agricultural food to running home appliances to charging batteries. (I found this iniative to be interesting, too, and syndicated their blog as well: [livejournal.com profile] globalcycle at Livejournal and [syndicated profile] globalcyclesolutions_feed at Dreamwidth.

Because Betty Londergan, like me, is apparently doing research to help her find ideas that make the world a better place, she ran across the contest put on by the Unreasonable Institute (follow them on Twitter at @beunreasonable. Global Cycle Solutions is one of the finalists of their contest; Betty is sponsoring ten of the finalists herself. See the video below. Here's something you can do to decrease worldsuck today: take a look at some of the finalists' entries and find one to help sponsor.




What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (The beauty of it smote his heart)
If you missed the article in yesterday's Star Tribune, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts is collecting art from ANYBODY who is a Minnesota resident this weekend for their upcoming wildly popular exhibition "Foot in the Door 4," which is held once every ten years. If you bring a piece of art this weekend that fits inside a box 1' x 1' x 1,'(dubbed "the Curator") they'll put it in the exhibition. That's the only requirement. They are also for the first time taking video offerings this year, with the requirement that it be no longer than 80 seconds. The exhibition opens February 18. They are collecting art this weekend, today and tomorrow, 10:30 - 4:30, but be warned: there's about a two and a half hour wait to check your artwork in [Edited to add: At least that's what they told me on the phone, but I just got back from checking in Delia's artwork, and the wait was an hour]. You do get your artwork back when the exhibition is over, near the end of June. They will all also be displaying submitted works on their website, as long as you give your permission.

I went to see the exhibition last decade, and it was utterly cool, one of the best things I've ever seen at the museum. People offered an amazing variety of objects, paintings, drawings, etc., from a kid's folder covered with doodles to the most beautifully intricate sculptures. I'm taking Delia this afternoon to check a piece of her artwork in:







Don't miss this opportunity, both to offer your artwork (and see it displayed! in a real museum!) and to visit the exhibition. Here's the information on the exhibits premiere event:
Third Thursday: Foot in the Door 4 Premiere
Thursday, February 18, 2010
6 – 9 p.m.

museum-wide

Celebrate opening night of "Foot in the Door 4," the wildly popular exhibition held every 10 years. Rub elbows with hundreds of Minnesota artists and view thousands of submissions in this stupendous art stampede. Sport your most fab footwear for our "Best Shoes in the Door" Flickr gallery. Sock it to our Saint Stephen's sock drive, ideal for warming the hearts and tootsies of kids and adults alike; new socks accepted at the entry. Live music by Lucy Michelle and the Velvet Lapelles.

Free; refreshments for sale.
I decided in the end to go back myself and offered one of my soul collage cards for the exhibition, Choosing the Heart of Flesh over the Heart of Stone.

What I did today to make the world a better place )

RecycleBank

Feb. 3rd, 2010 10:36 am
pegkerr: (Default)
I just found out about this program through Twitter and signed up today. From an article on Planet Green (@planetgreen on Twitter), here:
The green movement is a tricky thing. Most of us realize that climate change is happening--the world of the future will be fundamentally different because of what's happening today, and we all need to do something about it. Together.

The problem is sometimes thinking about doing something doesn't always translate into actually doing something. What can buying a pair of vintage jeans or reusing aluminum foil have any impact on something as big and scary as global warming? This is a problem that spans the spectrum of people too. Even the most vocal of treehuggers sometimes find it difficult to do something as seemingly simple and intuitive as recycling, and if that's the case, what does that say about the average person?

It's hard to guilt people into it. They'll end up just resenting the entire issue. It's even hard to appeal to people's emotions... there are only so many pictures you can show someone of cute, cuddly polar bears somewhere before they start getting numb to it. This is where people like RecycleBank come in. RecycleBank was started by two high school friends who have figured out how to get people to take good, green actions: reward them.

RecycleBank rewards people by giving them points based on how much they recycle. They can then redeem their points at a variety of stores and outlets. Or, if they don't want points, people can donate their credit to charitable causes, like the Green Schools program.

Today, RecycleBank serves over one million people across 20 states in the United States, and that number continues to grow every week. They are already operating in the UK, the program will launch service in Europe this summer, and they have received prestigious awards from the U.N, amongst others. To date, RecycleBank members have collectively saved over 4.4 million trees and over 295 million gallons of gas through weekly recycling efforts. Possibly one of the best parts of the deal, though, is over 40-50% of all rewards redeemed are at local businesses.

This is all to say that their model works. People end up recycling more if they get rewarded for doing it, even if the reward is small.

It does raise the question if people are recycling because they want to help the environment (and they just need a little push), or if their motives are purely to get rewards at local grocery stores, music shops, or even major e-commerce sites. But, ultimately, does it matter?

Who's to say that if people weren't being rewarded, if those 4.4 million trees would have been conserved or the 295 million gallons of gas would have been saved? A study last year found that only 38% percent of people recycle old cell phones, but 98% of people would be willing to do so... if they just got a little push with cash, store credit, or tax breaks.

"There are so many environmental initiatives out there that are important," says Gonen. "Solar, wind, biofuels. But these are all huge, capital-intensive projects. Most of us can't do that, but everyone can recycle."
This program seems like a win-win: encourage recycling while at the same time supporting local business. I checked with the city, and the curbside program isn't available where I live, in Minneapolis, but there are other ways you can earn recycle points.

Follow Recycle Bank here on Twitter and here on Facebook.

What I did today to make the world a better place )

I'm curious: are people still interested in the decrease worldsuck reports I'm doing? Have any of you followed up on some of the things I've reported and started doing these decrease worldsuck things I've mentioned yourself? If so, please let me know in the comments. If this initiative has inspired you in any way, I'd really like to know if/how I'm making a difference.
pegkerr: (Default)
I've come to enjoy Marc Gunn's ([livejournal.com profile] marcgunn) Irish and Celtic Music podcast very much (you may remember that Marc's the guy who recorded the wizard rock song I filked, My Father Was a Werewolf.) Anyway, Marc is offering a CD of his music for free download:
Marc Gunn is an acoustic folk musician based in New Orleans. His music is rooted in the American Celtic song tradition, and his preference of musical instruments-the autoharp-make him stand out as something unique in the Celtic musical community. He has been called "The Godfather of Celtic music online" for his steadfast support of indie Celtic music, free Celtic music downloads, and his award-winning Irish & Celtic Music Podcast, one of the most-popular music podcasts on iTunes.

Free CD - Confessions of a Celtic Music Junkie (76.8 MB ZIP)
This free compilation CD by Marc Gunn features songs from 9 albums ranging from traditional Celtic songs to his autoharp instrumentals, American Celtic song fusions, and as well as some comedy. The album is absolutely free to download and you are welcome to share all the music with your friends. Burn it to a CD. Email MP3s. Post a link to it on your website. Just share it to your heart's content.

Tracks:

1. Beer, Beer, Beer
2. Don't Go Drinking With Hobbits
3. Fairy Tale Waltz
4. Finnegan's Wake
5. Gypsy Rover
6. Jasper Tabby Kitty Cat-y
7. Lil Bit O'Love
8. Lord of the Pounce
9. Molly Malone (Cat's Perspective)
10. Monahan's Mudder's Milk
11. Silhouette of Longing Love
12. Stardust Serenade
13. The Bridge
14. The Lady of Setliff Manor
15. The Leprechaun
16. The Lusty Young Sith
17. What Shall We Do With A Catnipped Kitty
18. When She Held Me In Her Arms
19. Wild Mountain Thyme


Twice-monthly Celtic and Irish music by the best independent Celtic music groups. Irish drinking songs, Scottish folk songs, bagpipes, music from Ireland, Scotland, Brittany, Wales, Nova Scotia, Galacia, Australia and the United States. Hosted by Marc Gunn of the Brobdingnagian Bards.

What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (Default)
New tops so pretty for Fiona and Peg they must be shared )

Thanks to Grandma Mel and Nana for funding the purchases.

(And those new yoga pants look amazing on Fiona.)

What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (All we have to decide is what to do with)
I have placed up for auction in the [livejournal.com profile] help_haiti auction autographed copies of my two books:

A copy of Emerald House Rising, mass market paperback. First printing. Opening bid $10.00. Bid here.

A copy of The Wild Swans, trade paperback. First printing. Opening bid $20.00. Bid here.

I believe the auction closes January 20 at noon Eastern time.

What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (Default)
1% for the Planet (on Twitter at @1percentFTP) advertise themselves as "a growing global movement of 1150 companies that donate 1% of their sales to a network of 1,921 environmental organizations worldwide."

Yesterday, they released a collection of 40 .mp3s being sold at Amazon for $3.99 to raise money for the cause (in the US, at that price today only). Forty songs. For $3.99, what a steal! Why not check out some new artists and help the environment at the same time??

What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (Default)
What I did this year to decrease worldsuck:

January )

February )

March )

April )

May )

June )

July )

August )

September )

October )

November )
pegkerr: (Default)
TweetsGiving is a global celebration that aims to change the world through the power of gratitude. Follow these simple steps to bring your grateful heart to the party:

1. Share your Gratitude: Share whatever you're thankful for on Twitter, your blog, Flickr, Facebook, YouTube, or blip.fm. Include the #tweetsgiving tag and a link to TweetsGiving so we can share your grateful heart with the world!

I do have a great deal to be thankful for this year. It's been a hard year in many ways, but I've been reminded time and time again that my family is supported by caring people, both our personal friends and family, and people like you, many of whom I've never even met, but who still care and reach out to us. I have a wonderful, loving husband, and two beautiful, smart, kind, creative, strong and funny girls who are growing more wonderful every day. The girls are doing well in school, and we're beginning the college search process for Fiona. I'm going back to karate! We're still managing to pay all of our bills on time, even after a year and a half of unemployment (with scrimping and saving and gifts and the food shelf and kind people like our orthodontist who allowed us to cut our monthly payment, etc.) Friends continue to send us job leads. My car still actually runs, which I'm pretty much convinced must be a miracle. And I've discovered the Decrease Worldsuck project this year, which has added so much joy to my life. And I'm having a blast with Alternity.

2. Give: Contribute in honor of whatever you're thankful for. Epic Change says: each $10 donation brings us 1 brick closer to a classroom, orphanage/ dormitory, library and cafeteria at the #twitterkids' school in Arusha, Tanzania, or helps us fund a future Epic Change project. I say, if you have another charity you'd like to contribute to instead, go for it.

3. Spread the love. Most importantly, repeat step #1 as often as possible until noon EST on Thursday, November 26th, 2009. Then:

4. Follow the Story on Facebook, Twitter, or by subscribing to a feed: [syndicated profile] epicchange_feed/[livejournal.com profile] epicchange. (Note: If you follow @1800Flowers on Twitter, they'll donate $1 per new follower to Epic Change.

What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (Wizard Rock)
If you're starting to have a hankering for wizard rock holiday music, you're in luck: Jingle Spells 3 is now available from the Leaky Cauldron. You can order the physical CD (limited print run of 1500, so order now) which will ship in early December, OR you can order the tracks for download, either immediately from Leaky or in a week or so from iTunes. Leaky's also offering a deal where you can download all three albums for a reduced price. All profits are being donated to the Harry Potter Alliance.

We have very much enjoyed the two previous albums. About half the bands on this year's disk are among the groups I consider just about the strongest and best in wizard rock: Ministry of Magic, Gred and Forge, Romilda Vane and the Chocolate Cauldrons, RiddleTM, Tonks and the Aurors, etc.

What I did today to make the world a better place )

A new card

Nov. 19th, 2009 08:15 pm
pegkerr: (Default)

The Call - Council Suit
The Call - Council Suit
I am the One who summons you, often in the still hours when you least expect it. I may be loud and imperative, or so quiet that you will be tempted to ignore me, as badly timed or inconvenient. Do not do so, upon peril of your soul. The Call must be heeded, for it is the infusion of the Divine into the everyday world.



What I did today to make the world a better place )
pegkerr: (Default)
GiveMN is a new way to donate and raise money online.

Whether you want to donate money, run a fundraiser for your favorite nonprofit, or raise money as a nonprofit, GiveMN offers simple, secure tools to achieve your goals.

Donors
Give to any charity in the U.S. and keep track of all of your charitable donations Make tax-deductible donations to any 501(c)(3) charity, church, or educational institution in the U.S. Set up recurring donations, and even keep track of all of your charitable receipts in one place so you're organized for tax-time.

Fundraisers
Run campaigns and special events to support your favorite charities Set up charitable registries to celebrate special events, collect pledges, and raise funds for nonprofits. Create a fundraising page for your wedding, race, or missions trip to raise money for a nonprofit.

Nonprofits
Reach new constituents online and activate your supporters to raise funds Connect with a huge audience of potential supporters through GiveMN's existing community and social networks like Facebook and Twitter. Create projects to raise money for specific purposes, and empower your supporters to raise money for your cause - without any assistance from you.

Be a part of revolutionizing philanthropy in Minnesota by helping to fund future transaction costs for donations through GiveMN. By supporting GiveMN, you ensure that 100% of people's gifts go to nonprofits.

All Donations Made on Nov 17 are matched!
Mark your calendars for Tuesday, Nov. 17, 2009 – Give to the Max Day! Give to the Max Day is a giving stimulus plan created to increase giving to nonprofits across Minnesota. Our goal is to raise as much money as possible for Minnesota charities in 24 hours.

What I did today to make the world a better place )

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