When I started high school, I was a homeless runaway so dreams of correcting my teeth or keeping eye appointments were impossible to become reality. At the time when my glasses finally broke, I felt it didn’t make a difference and I would be okay. After a couple months, I noticed I was always tired, I didn’t want to read much, and my grades were not doing as well. My basketball skills seemed to be slipping, and what little confidence I had began to disintegrate. I stopped looking at people’s faces because I couldn’t tell who they were. I formed a bad habit of always looking at the ground. I was struggling but didn’t know why.
I can’t remember his or her name, but I remember a teacher saying something about my eyesight. I told him it wasn’t an issue. Another teacher suggested getting an eye exam because it had been some years since my last exam and quite a while since I had worn glasses. I tried to shrug off my teachers’ concerns as if it was something I didn’t want to do, but these individuals knew I was homeless and the lack of finances was the issue. They wouldn’t take no for an answer. One of them was a Lions Club member and suggested I fill out an application to their glasses program grant. At the time, I had never heard of a service club, let alone the Lions Club. I didn’t want to ask anyone for help, but they assisted me in the process, helping me fill out the application form. I was able to receive an eye exam at Wal-Mart Vision Center and received a new pair of glasses.
Now two things happened. First, after my enormous migraine headaches went away because of my new glasses, I could see. My eyesight wasn’t perfect, but my confidence grew. I was able to look up at people and my basketball skills began to come back. I felt more comfortable in what I was doing. It made a huge difference. The second thing that happened was that my grades improved. Not having eyeglasses had been negatively affecting me. Getting help to have new ones made a real improvement in my performance.
I never knew of service clubs until high school. I had never heard of Kiwanis for example, and they had a program in our school for youth but I didn’t find out about most of these clubs and their purpose until after graduation. Then when I began working with at-risk youth, homeless youth, and young adults, I remembered what the Lions Club had done for me. I spent a lot of time getting to know our local Rotary, Lions, Kiwanis, Optimists, Soroptimists, TOPS and other service clubs in our community. I spent a lot of time creating a relationship between them and our community youth program. Because of these efforts, many youth received services such as clothing, food, shelter and, yes, glasses.
It may seem a simple story, but one service club member I encountered in high school made a difference in my life by assisting me when I didn’t even know I needed it. That member’s actions enlightened me, making me aware of resources I never knew existed. I was then able to introduce those services to others in-need throughout our community—one person led to the assistance of hundreds of people including myself.
My goal is to team with service clubs across the United States; not only to assist us in funding the Community Activity Network Project, but to help us in meeting needs on a local level. Many club members are involved in their community and have first-hand experience with the challenges they are seeing on a local level. Together we can develop the CAN Project, a much needed resource, that can benefit of hundreds of thousands of people across the United States while assisting, and keeping a focus on, our local communities.