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Make
A Donation - Testimonials
This is
a portrait of how my involvement with Diverse and Resilient
has been for me. It's been over a year since I have been a
member of the Diverse and Resilient Youth Advisory Committee.
I was asked to be a part of Diverse & Resilient
through a friend named Kelly. She felt that I could be an
asset to the group, and I feel that I have been.
I find
myself learning so much information from my co-members in
the youth advisory, learning things that could have been helpful
while I was attending school. Being the oldest member of the
group at 22, I initially felt it would be hard to relate to
the younger members. However I was completely wrong. I found
out that they appreciate me, just as much as I appreciate
them. We are a family of sorts, and when we fall, there is
always another committee member there to pick us up.
In our
Youth Advisory Committee meetings we say how we feel
and each of us is equal in the eyes of each other. We believe
in being fair and respectful to each other at all times. We
also have done really great activities together .We have gone
out of town together, and we also done experiential activities
to see how much we trust each other. We've even painted really
nice pottery which was both fun, and a way to all be on equal
footing in terms of experience.
Through
all of this, Diverse and Resilient gave us all the
chance to learn and understand each other. We believe that
learning and understanding is necessary to change your own
life and the lives of other young people.
The Youth
Advisory Committee members appreciate the input of others
because these may be just the ideas to improve and enlarge
the lives of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth.
- Gerald,
Milwaukee, 22 yrs old
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I have
been involved with Diverse and Resilient Programs for
some time, first as a Youth Development Specialist,
now as a member of LYDAC. My organization, Harmony
Café, in Appleton, gets some funding from Diverse
and Resilient to assist in our efforts to make a safe
space for LGBT youth and young adults and loads of other allies
to get together for fun and relaxation. During my involvement
with Diverse and Resilient, I have stretched and grown.
For those
who have ever heard of Myers Briggs, my personality type is
Introvert, Insightful, Thinking and Judgmental (INTJ) - big
time. One weakness with this personality type is the tendency
to think and over-analyze way too much, often at the expense
of awareness of the present moment. Another weakness is lack
of good social skills, and sometimes a mistrust of other people
(particularly those in authority) and their motivations.
At one Youth Development Specialist training, we did
an activity that involved two teams trying to work their way
through a maze with ambiguous guidance from the facilitators.
As an INTJ-kind-of person, I immediately started thinking
about what the inventors of this activity were likely trying
to teach us and assuming there was some trick that we needed
to figure out to solve the maze. I assumed that we were working
"against" the facilitators, that they had the answer
and were unfairly tricking us, and that we would not be able
to get through the maze by ordinary means. I started thinking
of alternative and creative ways that maybe we'd be able to
get through - to beat the facilitators. In the meantime, the
maze was solved by people who were just enjoying the activity
and being aware of the present moment and what was happening
to their team and the other team. No deep thinking or distrust
was needed - in fact, mistrust was a hindrance.
Of course, such activities are useless unless you can learn
from them. Back in the "real world", I've been working
with numerous governmental and community people trying to
get a building for use by the program I direct, Harmony
Café. It is easy for me to think that all the building
and health inspectors and city planning department people
are enemies, who enjoy nothing more than to put up roadblocks
and bureaucracies to prevent a valuable program from succeeding.
Instead, I've tried to think about the maze activity - that
there is a path of success despite all the seeming obstacles,
and that working with others, not against them, is the best
way to get through the maze. Instead of being a hindrance,
our "real world" maze and its challenges has strengthened
us.
- Shannon
Kenevan, Director, Harmony Café, Appleton, WI
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As I
look back over the last decade of my life, the single greatest
positive influence on my development as a human being has
clearly been my involvement with the Diverse and Resilient
Program and with Gary Hollander, its Executive Director.
My experiences with Diverse & Resilient have helped
me to better understand myself and others, challenged me to
grow, sustained my motivation to make the world a better place,
enriched my skills in many areas and provided perspectives
that have led to attitude changes that make me a better person
in my work and personal life.
- Marilyn
Levin, MSW, Social Justice Coalition, La Crosse, WI
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Diverse
and Resilient has encouraged me to continue thinking outside
the box that society deems as acceptable behavior for people
who work with youth. Gary Hollander demonstrates a high level
of understanding and sympathy with youth and his resourcefulness
in bringing together great minds in Wisconsin is readily replicable
elsewhere. This resourcefulness highlights his ability to
lead thoughtfully and take responsible risks. In my work with
youth, I have found the 7 Pillars of Successful Youth Development
Programs useful in determining the workability and sustainability
of all projects and project functions.
The group
of youth advisors that work with Diverse and Resilient
are phenomenal. They offer insight and guidance to youth
development specialists throughout Wisconsin, and I feel
lucky to have their thoughts and direction while I work on
further developing various youth-centered activities for LGBT
people.
The Rainbow
Alliance (RAY) Youth Development Specialist workshops
are phenomenal learning experiences. The longer Project
Q has been around, the more needs we seem to identify
that go unmet. For example, we are experiencing needs among
young people currently living in more rural settings, like
West Bend. I have been able to gather resources and get input
on how Project Q can grow. Additionally, being a part
of the RAY network and attending these sessions have
enabled me to look more deeply into the development and protocols
of youth programming.
I have
grown, personally, in a direction I never thought I would
be growing. The affirmation I receive from Gary, the Diverse
and Resilient youth advisors, and RAY youth development
specialists is phenomenal. I am confident in my service
delivery. I am competent in my pool of skills. However, the
most important thing that has happened, in terms of my growth
and development, I have found out that I don't have to take
care of EVERYONE! In order to do my job the most successfully,
I actually get to take care of myself! It sounds simple, but
I believe it's revolutionary.
In fact,
that's a good descriptor for Gary's work in the LGBT youth
community. REVOLUTIONARY!
- Ita
Meno, Milwaukee LGBT Community Center
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