Hello friends!
I thought that now would be a great time to update all of you who have been following our adventure in philanthropy. Where do I start? Joe, Josh and I have been so busy over the last month doing things from legal paperwork to planning our first event that I can’t remember the last time I got a full night’s sleep… and it’s been so awesome!
Things are moving along really well. I think I can speak for the boys and say that we’re all really happy about the progress we’ve been making.
I’ll start with our event. A while back when we were talking about doing this global project that gave people a convenient way to give back to the places they go I knew that I wanted to do something here in Austin, the city that I am madly in love with and has given *me* so much. After much searching to find an organization that has a great purpose, but needs a helping hand, I found a really fantastic program called the Learning and Tutoring Center of East Austin. LTCEA, which provides free tutoring for children on the east side of town, is a small organization, but what they lack in size and funding they make up for in with a whole lot of heart! LTCEA is run by a husband and wife team, LaVerne and Charles, and they fund the program completely out of pocket. After talking to LaVerne on the phone, the three of us just knew that LTCEA was the organization we wanted to help. Our plan was to lead a hike through the Austin Greenbelt, a fun (albeit very hot) hike where we asked each person to donate $20. The Inaugural Goodwill Globe-trot took place on June 19th. We had nearly 20 people (and 5 pups!) join us and we collected over $400!

Goodwill Globetrotting's Hikers
With the funds we raised, we planned to buy as many supplies as possible: a water cooler, school supplies and most importantly, breakfast. When Laverne told us that none of the children they help usually eat breakfast before they come to the center we wanted to fix that, after all, breakfast is the most important meal of the day, right? We’ll be able to get them enough food and juice for all 20 kids for their month long summer program. On top of that, we were able to get them a computer to add to their classroom! Purely by chance one day, Joe and I came across a computer that was being thrown out and we rescued it and had it checked out by a techie friend (Thanks, Jay!!) and it is good to go! So all in all, while it was a small start to something that we hope to become a global standard, it was a huge success. Everyone had a great time on the hike (though we nearly lost a couple of dogs along the way) and I think lots of new friendships were formed, but most importantly the people of the LTCEA were overjoyed with our desire to help and the turn out we had. Being an integral part of that fundraiser was definitely one of the best things I’ve ever done.
Elsewhere in the Goodwill Globetrotting world, more amazing connections are developing. Our friend Arlo knows Jason, the creator of another cool “micro-philanthropy” website. Givv.org is a fantastic site, also based here in Austin, where users set up monthly donations of any size to as many charities around the world as they desire. Arlo added both Goodwill Globetrotting and the LTCEA to Givv.org’s list of charities. Take the time to check out Givv.org. If everyone donated one dollar a month it could really make a difference! Hopefully in the future things like Givv.org and Goodwill Globetrotting with be household names!
The Goodwill Globetrotting family expanded last month, when we hired our first employee! And by “hired our first employee” I mean “asked my sister to work for free.” My sister Ruth, the most awesome-est girl I know, is now our Social Media Coordinator. Her role will be to ensure that the Goodwill Globetrotting Facebook page, Twitter and blog (and any other form of social media that might arise in the future) are effectively integrated. Needless to say, I am thrilled with this addition. I’m so happy to have my best friend and sister working with me on this project that I love so much.
I should probably tell you a little bit about myself. Just like Joe and Josh, I have an unbridled love of travel. Over the years as I’ve planned my adventures I’ve always tried to find places to donate or volunteer when I’m abroad. It was shocking to me how difficult that was. Sure you can find volunteer opportunities, but more often than not, they require a large chunk of time or an even larger chunk of money, neither of which I have to spare. Eventually I gave up trying to fit volunteering and donating into my trips and instead planned my last trip around my volunteering.
I worked with an awesome group in Zambia called ALERT, the African Lion and Environmental Research Trust. The goal of ALERT is to rehabilitate and reintroduce lions back into the wild. As a hardcore animal lover, working with the lions every day was the most incredible thing I have ever done, but even more rewarding were the weekly trips we made to the nearby village of Maunga. On our visits, we participated in “elephant mitigation” projects and taught health lessons. During one trip to Maunga, I toured the local school, a small and bare one roomed brick building. The school books were UNICEF provided texts that only go up to about grade level 3. There were no teaching materials around, and I don’t even think there was a chalkboard. One day after a rough afternoon of digging ditches to deter the elephants from eating their vegetables, the kids gathered round and performed several traditional songs and dances for us. After they were finished we said “thank you” by giving the teacher of that school some teaching aids that we’d bought in town and that one of the other volunteers had brought from Australia.

Some of the Children of Maunga and their Teacher
They were things like mathematics tables, diagrams of the human body, maps and so on. I have traveled a good amount; I have seen horrific poverty and destitution over the years. I KNEW these things existed, and yes, I was changed by them, but watching the reaction of the kids to those “mundane” things that so many of us spent years taking for granted in school was completely life altering for me. Of all the things I have done and seen over the years, I have never been so affected by anything as I was that day. I knew that my calling in life was to help school children in places like Maunga. Goodwill Globetrotting is how I hope to fulfill that mission. I want to fix it so that you don’t have to plan a lengthy and expensive volunteer trip. I want you to be able to go visit Victoria Falls in Zambia and drop off diagrams of the human body and multiplication tables for the kids in Maunga and countless other villages without it being difficult. And even better, if you want to go to Maunga and help build them another school building (complete with a chalkboard), we can help you do that with ease. THAT is Goodwill Globetrotting.
Good things are happening in Goodwill Globetrotting these days. Wait till you see what Ryan Hromadka has done with our website! It’s so great I can’t wait to show everyone I have ever met in my whole life. On that note, I’ll sign off.
Until next time,
Rebecca