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Do1Thing Blog

Intern Josh Sykes edits captions for Do1Thing

The Do1Thing project includes the efforts of many high-profile photographers and editors. But it wouldn’t have been possible without the help of a dedicated crew of interns. Erin Prah will graduate from Penn State in May. Working from her home in Uniontown, Pa., she published videos across social networks, helped to proofread captions and worked to streamline the photo feed from Flickr to the Do1Thing multimedia page.
Jackie Hai pitched in from the University of Massachusetts in Amherst to edit video. Working from the Penn State main campus in State College, Pa., Doug Bauman, a senior, and Josh Sykes, who graduated in December, helped to proof captions and geo-tag photos.
Thanks for doing a great job!

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Blog Features and Postings Include:

Protege Films
Rochester Institute of Technology
Pioneer Press
Robert Seale Blog
Burlap and Blues
Doug Menuez
Girl Scouts Heart of New Jersey
18 and Out
Sunshine Girl on a Rainy Day
Greedy or Needy
Live Books Resolve
Homeless News
National Network for Youth
NPPA
Shelter Care
Lianne Milton
Cafe Press
Timothy Roche
Idaho Resources Opportunities Communities Knowledge
Art is Life
Salt
Light Workers
JFW Photography Blog
Ravelry
A Lost Son
NJ Arch
Covenant House Washington
The Musings of Miss Fifi
Somerset Home for Temporarily
Displaced Children

Chattanoogans and North Georgians for Economic Human Rights

http://westfieldnj.com/sthelens/bu030109.html

Thought Supllies

http://www.wanderwizz.co.uk/innsbruck?q=Hotel%20Innsbruck&as=g28c21q

Tim Larsen Photography
DVBS
Visuals Editors
Gayle Zucker
Multimedia Muse/
Daybreak Dayton
Sarah Hoskins
http://www.uptownupdate.com/
John The Photographer

http://catinbag.blogspot.com/2009/02/bag-news-notes-got-hot-one.html

http://www.fotovision.org/news/index.php?ID=138

http://www.fireflyimage.com/content.html?page=5

http://www.takepart.com/blog/tag/homelessness/

http://www.philleeproductions.org/perseveranceblog/perseverance/do1thing-a-portrait-of-perseverance

http://nmtp_cap_project.cias.rit.edu/extra/

http://liberatedmuse.blogspot.com/2009/02/happy-valentines-day-giving-back.html

http://www.minnpost.com/braublog/2009/02/19/6816/pioneer_press_garvin_shines_a_sweet_light

http://lucianperkins.com/lucian/

http://www.newsfromourshoes.net/links.cfm

http://do1thingorg.blip.tv/#1795534

http://www.youtube.com/user/do1thing

http://www.publish2.com/newsgroups/cvj521

http://www.photoinduced.com/

http://blogs.chron.com/momhouston/2009/02/three_free_things_do_one_thing_1.html

http://bagnewsnotes.typepad.com/bagnews/

http://www.bobsacha.com/

http://www.redbankgreen.com/

http://www.covenanthouse.org/

http://blog.livebooks.com/?blogview=resolve

http://www.nationalhomeless.org/index.html
http://www.davidbergman.net/blog/
http://www.multimediashooter.com/wp/category/multimedia-jobs/headlines/
http://www.nationalhomeless.org/
http://www.rodmarphoto.com/
http://wackymommy.org
http://www.nn4youth.org/news.aspx
http://newspapervideo.ning.com/profiles/blogs/do1thing-photographers-tackle
http://www.covenanthousemi.org/article/do-1-thing-success
http://cnsblog.wordpress.com/2009/02/17/teaming-up-to-shine-light-on-homeless-youths/
http://www.heartgallerynj.org/
http://www.dryerbuzz.com/2009/02/do-one-thing-one-person-can-do-wonders-for-homeless-youth/
http://darynkagan.ning.com/forum/topics/what-would-you-do-if-you-could
http://www.takepart.com/blog/2009/02/16/help-homeless-teens-with-do1thing/
http://www.standupforkids.org/Do1Thing/Do1Thing-New.html
http://www.redbankgreen.com/
http://nyppa.org/
http://atlanta.daybooknetwork.com/story/2009/02/14/17208do1thing.shtml
http://www.ulstercorps.org/?p=1237
http://thedotinthemiddle.blogspot.com/
http://www.galler7.com/links.html
http://mcbloggie.blogspot.com/
http://trentacular.com/2009/02/galleriffic-1-0/
http://www.oregonlive.com/
http://photojournalismlinks.com/
http://www.takepart.com/blog/
http://www.foveaexhibitions.org/do1thing/
http://www.nppa.org/news_and_events/news/2009/01/vanhemmen.html
John the Photographer
McBloggie
Robert Seale
Kamkat
Portland
Idealist
Icaryn
Examiner
Covenant House DC
Cafepress
Orange County Register
Light Stalkers
Be the Change
NBC Los Angeles
V2V
Current TV
Altpick
Causecase
http://www.care2.com/c2c/share/detail/1036219″ target=”_blank”>Care 2
XPLSV
Atlanta Daybook
Sports Shooter
Flickr
Covenant House Voice
Najlah Feanny
Digg
Danielle Richards
Covenant House NJ
Colorbox Images
Web Me

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The Do1Thing cake donated for the Covenant House prom in Newark.

The Do1Thing cake donated for the Covenant House prom in Newark

If you’re wondering what all those single acts of kindness added up to on Valentine’s Day, here’s an early report from Covenant House:

In New York City approximately $20,000 was raised and you filled the clothing room with in-kind gifts.

In New Jersey you raised another $10,000, you filled half of a large room with donated goods, you filled the gym with people, threw a prom for the kids and you topped off the pantry and filled the freezer.

In Orlando you delivered new clothing, baby items, hygiene supplies, gym supplies, books and cash.

In Missouri local media coverage from St. Louis Catholic Review, KIHT and KLOU-FM spawned numerous clothing drives amongst you and you raised more cash for the local Covenant House.

In Georgia one of the highlights was a group of high school and college students from Christ Harvest Ministries, who stayed all day and played basketball with the kids. Covenant House also received numerous gift cards, clothes and school supplies from you.

In Michigan more than 100 of you showed up and donated cash along with in-kind gifts estimated at another couple of thousand dollars. The local Fox news television station helped raise awareness.

In Texas they’re still trying to add up the in-kind, monetary and gift card donations you delivered. They had terrific turn out due to coverage in the Houston Chronicle and a 3.5 minute piece on the local Fox morning show. Tours went on all day long. Importantly, many of you said you had never heard of Covenant House and came out that day because of the coverage.

In Washington D.C. coverage on the local NBC affiliate, local cable News Channel 8, and two local newspapers, the D.C. Examiner and East of the River, caused you to come out in large numbers and give in-kind donations.

Around the country Covenant House received at least $75,000 in cash donations, which is enough to keep at least two kids in a Covenant House facility for an entire year. This includes the cost of feeding them, housing them and providing them with all the medical and professional needs they might require.

Additionally, traffic at the Covenant House website was “way up” (we still don’t have exact numbers) and awareness of the youth homelessness problem was raised.

This all happened because so many of YOU did 1 thing.

If you weren’t able to Do 1 Thing on Valentine’s Day, that’s OK, there will be plenty of future opportunities.

Keep coming back to this site for more information. Or better yet, sign up for our e-mail list so you won’t miss your opportunity to do 1 thing.

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Agent Thunder hangs his poetry and art on the walls of his small room at the Daybreak shelter. Photograph by Larry C. Price.

Agent Thunder hangs his poetry and art on the walls of his small room at the Daybreak shelter. Photograph by Larry C. Price.

He will be known as “Agent Thunder.”

Why? Is it a street name?

Nah. This just seems like the perfect opportunity to use it.

Agent Thunder has been homeless since February 2008. He is 18 now, which means that he went out onto the street when he was 17 years old and still in high school. Which means that he didn’t finished high school.

To be specific, Agent Thunder was kicked out of his adoptive parents’ home. There was a lot of yelling and screaming. The whys don’t matter. He went back to live with his biological family. Social services took him away from them when he was 7 and now, belatedly, he realizes it was for good reason. He is tactful.

Their lifestyle, it was a problem.

 Their lifestyle involved a lot of drinking and smoking pot and people who made Agent Thunder feel really, really uncomfortable. He left his mother and went to live with a brother, who is not really a brother, but seems like one. And then the brother got into trouble, a  lot of trouble involving drugs and probation violations, and well, to make short work of a long story, Agent Thunder, found himself on the street, looking for a place to stay. He moved from friend to friend, couch to couch, each time wondering how long the welcome would last. It never lasted long.

He spent one night at a shelter for homeless adults. The place was creepy, full of drug addicts and people who didn’t have any problem walking around without their pants. The odor was atrocious and he had to lie on a mat on the floor less than two feet from people on either side of him.

I was afraid.

Afraid? Of being hurt?

 No. Afraid of being like them. Of being in the same situation they were in.

 That night at the shelter, lying awake, smelling the smells, listening to conversations that he wishes he didn’t hear, conversations that he will not repeat, Agent Thunder resolved to get his life together.

 I really began to reflect and think about what I did to mess myself up.  That night convinced me to find something better so I wouldn’t end up with something worse.

A woman told him about Daybreak, a nonprofit organization in Dayton that provides housing and social services for children and youths, and he went, reluctantly at first, to the bright, painted brick building on Patterson Boulevard. At Daybreak he has his own bedroom in the shelter, a clean if spartan space. He’s getting job training and doing some work at a senior citizens center. He likes art and can draw, really draw. He shyly shares a few works, a perfect sketch of people sitting on the day room couches, stylized figures with hearts and birds, a comic book hero with bulging muscles. It’s all done in ink, on lined paper, ripped from a spiral notebook, but it is good. The sort of good that deserves more attention.

He’s working toward his high school degree at the charter school that works with Daybreak residents. At times, it’s been one step forward, two steps back. Agent Thunder will be the first to admit he has a way to go.

I did some things not a lot of people would be proud of. I didn’t have a job. I wasn’t contributing to the household. I was clueless about being on my own. I still have pride issues. I don’t like asking for stuff and hearing no.

 Five years down the road, he sees college or a really good job in fine arts or fashion or the culinary world. He talks about a future in which he hosts art shows in different countries around the world, art shows with paintings, drawings, lots of different pictures. It’s a big dream for a homeless street kid, but then, considering where Agent Thunder has been and where he is now, it doesn’t seem so far fetched.

You never know. You’ve got to believe anything’s possible.

– Debbie M. Price

 

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Rob, now 21, reads the Bible daily in his small apartment at Daybreak. Photograph by Larry C. Price.

Rob, now 21, reads the Bible daily in his small apartment at Daybreak. Photograph by Larry C. Price.

 

Every time I’d get a paycheck, they’d wanted it.

Barely 19 years old, Rob found himself working to support the drug habits of his mother and his sisters and their assorted boyfriends. Social services had taken him away from this same, drug-addled mother when he was only 7 years old. He’d had nine foster families in 11 years. When he turned 18, fantasizing about having a real home, he’d returned to his biological mother.

 I thought it would be different.

It wasn’t.

His mother’s drug habit was worse than ever. Rob was paying the rent and buying the food while an ever-growing cast of characters hung around getting high. It finally became more than he could stand. Figuring that there was no point in working if everyone else was just going to drink or smoke up his pay check, Rob quit his steady job at Home Depot. Soon after, the family was evicted.  Locked out with only the clothes on his back, Rob was homeless. It was winter, 2007, in Dayton, Ohio. And he didn’t even have a coat.

That first night on the street Rob slept on a dirty mattress in a dirty garage with nothing but a cheap little candle for light. The place was packed with other homeless people trying to stay warm. An older man gave him a tarp to cover himself with as the temperature dropped below freezing. Later, another homeless buddy would come up with a coat for him.

Except for a few nights of couch hopping, taken in by people who felt sorry for him, it would be almost a year and a half before he sleep again in a warm, safe bed. During that time, Rob learned to trust no one, to be alert and to keep his counsel. He learned to carry two rocks tied into a sock as protection against the sort of things that can go bad without warning.

He worked odd jobs, replacing gas tanks, mowing yards, shoveling snow. He scrapped cans for 25 cents a pound. On the coldest nights, he’d walk around and around, just to keep the blood flowing. He got sick, very sick, a staph infection, ear, lung, skin infections. At the hospital, he denied that he was homeless. He knew that the nurses knew that he was lying, but he was too afraid to admit the truth. Too afraid he’d be forced to go to a homeless shelter where he was certain he’d become one of them, the hardcore, the crazy, the lost.

 His weight dropped to a skeletal 90 pounds. He tried to keep warm with things he found in the trash, a torn blanket, a tarp with a hole in it. His every thought was about finding enough money to buy food. He stole and didn’t get caught but felt like he should. He had a high school degree, he wanted a real job, he longed to return to Home Depot, but, and he looks so ashamed when he talks about this part, he didn’t dare apply anywhere decent because he stank so bad.

 Finally, in November 2008, Rob found his way to a church where the pastor told him about Daybreak, a nonprofit Dayton organization that provides housing and social services to runaway and homeless teenagers. Now 21, Rob has been at the new Daybreak shelter near downtown Dayton since late 2008.  He has his own room with a warm bed and a hot shower down the hall, three meals a day and people who, he says, seem like family, a good family. He’s getting job training and looking for work. His ambitions are simple: a job, a bed, hot and cold running water, heck, he says, even a cup of cold, clean water is more than he had.

 People who try to conquer big things have to go after little things. The little things add up to big things.

 There are things that happened during Rob’s time on the street that he won’t talk about, things that he saw that make the lines around his eyes tighten. He looks down and away, nervous, with the residual anxiety of someone who has come through a horror, like war.

 He is far older than his 21 years, but for a moment, when he lets himself fantasize about his new life, complete with a dream house, his eyes shine like a little boy’s.

 Oh yes, he knows what he wants in this dream house. He would have a tower on some land, a place where he could look out over the trees and up at the sky. His room would be all white with white tile floors, white to reflect the other colors. There would be a mirror over a fireplace.

There are going to be trees. I can build a fire, right?

 He smiles at the thought.

It is a simple fantasy, no home theater or even a flat-screen TV, no fancy sports car in a three-car garage. Just a tower in the trees with pure white walls. Safe and clean and his. 

And one more thing, he says.

Everybody needs to take their shoes off when they come in my place.

— Debbie M. Price

 

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Antwuan, 19, in crisp white shirt and bright geometric tie. Photograph by Larry C. Price.

Antwuan, 19, in crisp white shirt and bright geometric tie. Photograph by Larry C. Price.

Nights on the street in Dayton, Antwuan stayed awake, listening to jazz on his iPod, a relic from his comfortable, middle-class life. As he counted the hours until dawn, too afraid to sleep, a single question played over and over in his mind.

 How could someone who was so successful in high school end up like this?

 The bad decisions and their consequences had piled up with stunning swiftness. He was going to enlist in the Navy, but didn’t. He drove without a license, hit a car and left the scene of the accident. The court was lenient; his parents weren’t. They hassled him, had expectations. He didn’t need them. His parents, fed up, said, fine go.

It was a minor dispute over something trivial. I thought I was ready to leave the nest. Words were said. I felt I couldn’t stay there anymore.

He stayed with friends; his welcome ran out. He didn’t know what else to do and was too proud to ask. By September 2008, Antwuan, 19, was homeless. He found places to hang out near traffic and lights and kept to himself.

 When other homeless people were coming around, I’d go into alert mode. Anything can happen. You’re always bracing yourself.

 During the day, Antwuan worked for a construction company owned by his girlfriend’s father. She packed lunches for him and sent them to the work sites with her father. On the way to jobs, he slept in the van and tried to keep the rest of the crew from finding out that he was homeless. After work, he hunkered down in a nearby park.  The park felt less dangerous than other places, but it had one big drawback. It was entirely too close to home, too close to friends.

 I didn’t want people that I knew to see me on the street. When I’d run into someone, I’d pretend I was just hanging, you know.

 Antwuan was one of the lucky ones. His time on the street was short-lived. His girlfriend’s father figured things out and persuaded him to seek help from Daybreak, a nonprofit organization that provides housing and social services for homeless teenagers. Now living in a supervised Daybreak apartment, Antwuan is enrolled in job training and is working on his application to a community college. He’s interviewing for jobs and dressing the part, dapper in crisp white shirt and tie. He’s learned enough about construction working as a helper on job sites to know that he wants to study basic building design, maybe get a degree in architecture. Going green, he says, is the ticket.

 My goal now is to get myself back on track, to get a steady job, learn how to budget money, spend wisely. I plan to support and maintain a family. If you believe in your goals and work for you goals, anything can happen.

 

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Lucian Perkins, a photojournalist for The Washington Post, documented graduates of The Covenant House Artisans Woodworking Program, a career-training initiative that teaches homeless and at-risk youth fine woodworking. A local business in Washington, DC, hired some program graduates. Watch here to see how that worked out.

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Nina Berman, a New-York based photojournalist, traveled to the Open Door Shelter in Chicago, Illinois, to photograph Jonathan Smith, 20, for Do1Thing.org .

Smith has been living at the shelter for several months. He grew up outside of Buffalo, New York in a household of alcoholism and abuse with several reports filed to the state’s child protection services by his school and neighbors. He left home at 16 and has had minimal contact with his family. He described his childhood as one that left him “emotionally and physically scarred.”

This presentation is a SoundSlides audio slideshow converted to video.

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Judy DeHaas, a photojournalist at the Rocky Mountain News, documented the lives of a young couple for Do1Thing.org. Michael Cunningham, 20, and his girlfriend Lea Hallaway, 18, have been together for about a year. They stay from time to time at Urban Peak, a shelter for homeless youth in Denver. DeHaas tells Do1Thing.org:

Being homeless is difficult for the pair, but they strive to stay together and support each other.

Michael was taken from his alcoholic father when he was three-years-old and placed in at least 42 foster homes by the time he was emancipated in February 2008. His mother disappeared when he was around 3. After leaving foster care, he was unable to hold down a job and wound up on the streets.

His last foster home was with Lea’s aunt, where the couple met. Lea’s mother, a crack addict died when she was 6, and she was taken into the system at 2. After living in a series of foster homes, she was adopted, but Lea started to run away when she turned 13 and was asked to move out by the time she was 16.

The couple has slept on friend’s couches, in shelters and in cheap motels while trying to get a grip on their lives and stabilize, something neither of them learned from their parents or their brief stays in foster homes.

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