Wednesday, July 16, 2008

You may say that I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one, I hope someday you will join us, and the world will live as one. ~John Lennon

People want to know exactly what I do and wonder what AmeriCorps is. I will tell you.
AmeriCorps (sometimes referred to as the domestic Peace Corps) is an organization that helps meet needs in communities all over the country. There are a lot of things one can do in AmeriCorps: work with kids, help the environment, aid in disaster relief, fight poverty. I am in AmeriCorps VISTA and we focus on the last one, fighting poverty, but before I get into the different branches of AmeriCorps I will tell you in general the benefits everyone gets. I know this is going to sound like an ad or a recruitment tactic, but I just want people to know what I do; I get a lot of questions and it's not the easiest thing to explain.

In AmeriCorps (VISTA, State & National) we sign up for one year of service to the country. We don't get paid a salary, but a living allowance, which sustains us at about poverty level (it's on purpose). At the end of your service you can take a $1,200 stipend or a $4,000 education grant (for paying off student loans or going back to school). I chose the stipend because I don't have student loans and I am not planning on going back to school. If you do have student loans you get loan forbearance during your service and they pay the interest in the interim. You can do AmeriCorps up to 3 years, but you can only take the education grant twice and the last time you have to take the stipend. You can see that they drill all of this into us, because I know about a lot of programs and things that I didn't even use.
Now the branches...
I will start with AmeriCorps VISTA because it's the best (I know that's debatable, but it's the one I know the most about because I am a VISTA)! Vista stands for: Volunteer In Service To America (We take the same oath the president does!). AmeriCorps VISTA is specifically devoted to fighting poverty. We aren't allowed to have any outside jobs or take any classes and must be available if our sponsoring organization calls us, 24 hours a day, 7 day a week. Luckily Harvesters usually on needs me Monday through Friday during regular business hours. We have a PSO (Pre Service Orientation), which is based by region, and ours was in Albuquerque, New Mexico this year. We learn there about poverty, misconceptions, our general and specific roles, networking and how to capacity build. Capacity building is a key term, it's like giving a seed roots so it can grow into a tree. VISTA's specifically have jobs that there shouldn't be a use for when they are done with their service. If you do your job right you should complete your task/s, grow your project, and work your way out of a job. I think we have more rules than the other branches, but VISTA has been around longer that AmeriCorps (which came about during the Clinton administration). Vista came from and is still associated with the Corporation for National and Community Service. I still don't quite know how all that works but VISTA was created in 1964 and is the oldest of the national service programs (include AmeriCorps, Learn and Serve AmeriCorps, and Senior Corps). We do secondary service, we don't work directly with clients. We leverage human, financial, and material resources to increase the capacity of low-income communities across the country (that's directly from the manual). There have been roughly 177,000 VISTAs. Oh, and we can't be political or religious if it's in any way linked to our service. I also applied directly to Harvesters, not to AmeriCorps and then placed somewhere, like I think it can be in State and/or National, but maybe they're all like that. To learn more about VISTA: http://www.americorps.org/about/programs/vista.asp.

AmeriCorps State & National is similar to VISTA because we both serve a year an all of the stuff I said two paragraphs ago. There are some of them at Harvesters too. They can work primarily with clients, mentoring youth, assisting crime victims, restoring parks, and building affordable homes, etc.) Instead of having an end date one calendar year after their start date like VISTAs do, State and National programs count hours and it usually works out to be about a year. I may have gotten some of it wrong, because I am not in AmeriCorps State &/or National. You can learn more about it here: State - http://www.americorps.org/about/programs/state.asp; National - http://www.americorps.org/about/programs/national.asp.

AmeriCorps NCCC is a little different than the other two. I don't know much about it, so I will direct you to the AmeriCorps website for that one: http://www.americorps.org/about/programs/nccc.asp. They live on a special AmeriCorps NCCC is what it says.

Okay, now have I really confused me. Feel free to ask me questions, I would be happy to at least try to answer them.

Here is the link to the AmeriCorps website: http://www.americorps.org/

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Good Morning, on this day we become legendary, everything we dreamed of; I'm like the fly Malcolm X, buy any jeans necessary, Detroit red cleaned up.

Those are lyrics from a Kanye West song. I love that it mentioned Malcolm X, I read his autobiography and he had a pretty fascinating life. But this post is supposed to be about the sunrise, so most likely it will be pretty boring, and I am apologizing up front for that. I got up at 5:30 this morning to go for a walk (I am doing a program for work where we count our steps everyday and try to increase our total each week). I usually walk in the evening, but I am busy tonight so I planned ahead. I love the morning, it's much more private. I think about all the people who see the sunset and then this morning I thought of how many fewer people are out and watching the sunrise. There were a lot of people exercising in the a.m., and the people seem to be much more friendly, I got a couple of "Good Morning's" from people and the are no good afternoon's or even hello's if you are exercising later in the day. See, I told you this would be boring. I'll mention some more of the highlights of today, I went to the new Chik-fil-a in Independence for lunch with 9 of my co-workers and I am still very full. I picked up lunch for a meeting from the Mixx and it smelled wonderful in my car all the way back. I am 300 steps away from 10,000, which is the most we are allowed to count for a day, so I am pretty stoked. Last night I finished the book Everything is Illuminated, it was really good. Now I am reading Look Me in the Eye by John Elder Robinson (Augusten Burroughs[Running with Scissors]'s brother). I am eating dinner tonight with my dad, stepmom, and their dog Zorro at Spin Pizza (It's doggy night on the patio--complete with puppy pizzas). I won't be able to see one of the new shows I am obsessed with, The Secret Life of the American Teenager, luckily it will be online tomorrow! So are you asleep yet? One more thing about mornings outside, theer is just a feeling of newness and hope (and less humidity) in the air that really energizes you (who needs caffeine?). Hmm... I think I might be asleep now. Peace.

Friday, July 11, 2008

"You Don't Get Harmony When Everybody Sings the Same Note" ~Doug Floyd

I live in the greatest city in the world, okay, at least the greatest in Missouri, that's right St. Louis, I think Kansas City is awesome. I have to give props to HB who wrote a post about how this city rocks, and I am totally just copying her. I have always said that I am from Kansas City, but this is the first time I lave actually lived in the city limits. I am finding a lot to do here too, and am wondering why I spent so much time in the suburbs, oh right, they're great too. Now, as it might suggest from the name of this blog and the title of this post --I love music, I am not totally musically inclined (I can play the piano and sing - in the loosest sense of both). I come from Blue Springs, along with such talents as Vedera, Tech N9ne (honestly don't know their music, but they are from BS), and of course our hometown boy David Cook. But, in the suburbs you can't just walk down the street and hear bands playing here and there. Free live music every Thursday on the Plaza and great free concerts on the KC Live stage in the Power & Light District are what I am talking about. What is it about when music is outside that makes it so much better? Go outside and listen and we'll talk about it later.