Filed under: personalfinancenewsss.wordpress.com | Tags: like, Look, Volunteerism, What

I spent an afternoon this week near-giddy because I was standing next to a compelling sculpture of a woman?s torso by the amazing artist Louise Bourgeois. It was beautifully showcased in the center of a closet that was actually a small room of mirrored doors located off a dazzling master bedroom.
This gives you an idea of my oh-so-grueling assignment as a volunteer for the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Manhattan Designer House Tour. You know, listening to Sinatra courtesy of Jonathan Schwartz while marveling at a round white bed flanked by round glass end tables and admiring a stunning Philip Porcella photograph, all the while greeting enthused participants of the tour.
Tough to be me, I know. But carry on I did as people stopped and stared in awe at the white room with purple and lavender accents. Truly I can?t do the home décor of Kris Fuchs — principal of SUITE New York, a contemporary furniture and modern design showroom on Madison Avenue — justice in this space, but there is a bigger point. While I was listening to ?ooh-ing? and ?aah-ing? in a delightful atmosphere, a terrific organization whose mission is to ?improve and enhance the quality of life for all young people, ages 6 to 18? was raking in the dough to the tune of $150 per ticket.
This is volunteerism. Sometimes when it feels like life is coming at us from too many directions, we put off the idea of volunteering because it just seems like another thing on our plate. This was one day of my life, one enriching day of meeting new people and seeing the crème de la crème of home design up close.
?You didn?t do anything with the kids [from the Boys & Girls Club]?? a friend asked about my assignment.
That?s the beauty of volunteering. You can go with your strengths. Two of mine are putting people at ease and striking up conversations. It?s all needed. It all matters.
?It is with great angst that I address you this year with the acknowledgement that we are all not doing as well financially as we have in the past,? wrote Daniel Quintero, executive director of the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club, in the organization?s 2008 annual report. ?That being said, our experience during the tough economic times is that our services are needed much more, and the demand becomes greater.?
According to three national alumni surveys conducted for Boys & Girls Clubs of America, most recently in 2007, 57%said their Club literally saved their life and 51% achieved a higher level of education than they thought possible because they were inspired by their Club participation. Nationally, 21% of African-American males do not graduate from high school, while only 2% of Boys & Girls Club African-American males do not finish.
Last month I wrote a column lauding the designation of September 11th as an official day of service. That call came about last year from then-Presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama at Columbia University and was made official this year by now-President Obama.
?To equate the tragedy of 9/11 with ?volunteerism? is a travesty,? one reader wrote in response to that column. ?We remember what happened on that day for what it was: an attack on US civilians on US soil.?
Why are those two points mutually exclusive? Wasn?t our shared humanity heightened by those attacks on our country? Some people feel called because of it.
The travesty, actually, would be watching our military do all the heavy lifting while most of our citizens live as if nothing has changed. We cannot all don the uniforms, get in the trenches, and endure the rigorous training. We cannot all leave our families and risk our lives every minute of every day. But we can do something besides sit back and criticize.
It?s almost embarrassing to say I did my part for one day by standing in a beautiful room amidst eye-popping décor. But really, isn?t the key figuring out what you are particularly equipped to do and then committing to it? These days, when fewer people are inclined to write a check, there are organizations galore looking for your special touch.
Give it to them. It?s a win-win. Trust me.
Nancy Colasurdo is a practicing life coach and freelance writer. Her Web site is www.nancola.com. Please direct all questions/comments to FOXGamePlan@gmail.com. (more…)
Filed under: personalfinancenewsss.wordpress.com | Tags: like, Look, Volunteerism, What

I spent an afternoon this week near-giddy because I was standing next to a compelling sculpture of a woman?s torso by the amazing artist Louise Bourgeois. It was beautifully showcased in the center of a closet that was actually a small room of mirrored doors located off a dazzling master bedroom.
This gives you an idea of my oh-so-grueling assignment as a volunteer for the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Manhattan Designer House Tour. You know, listening to Sinatra courtesy of Jonathan Schwartz while marveling at a round white bed flanked by round glass end tables and admiring a stunning Philip Porcella photograph, all the while greeting enthused participants of the tour.
Tough to be me, I know. But carry on I did as people stopped and stared in awe at the white room with purple and lavender accents. Truly I can?t do the home décor of Kris Fuchs — principal of SUITE New York, a contemporary furniture and modern design showroom on Madison Avenue — justice in this space, but there is a bigger point. While I was listening to ?ooh-ing? and ?aah-ing? in a delightful atmosphere, a terrific organization whose mission is to ?improve and enhance the quality of life for all young people, ages 6 to 18? was raking in the dough to the tune of $150 per ticket.
This is volunteerism. Sometimes when it feels like life is coming at us from too many directions, we put off the idea of volunteering because it just seems like another thing on our plate. This was one day of my life, one enriching day of meeting new people and seeing the crème de la crème of home design up close.
?You didn?t do anything with the kids [from the Boys & Girls Club]?? a friend asked about my assignment.
That?s the beauty of volunteering. You can go with your strengths. Two of mine are putting people at ease and striking up conversations. It?s all needed. It all matters.
?It is with great angst that I address you this year with the acknowledgement that we are all not doing as well financially as we have in the past,? wrote Daniel Quintero, executive director of the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club, in the organization?s 2008 annual report. ?That being said, our experience during the tough economic times is that our services are needed much more, and the demand becomes greater.?
According to three national alumni surveys conducted for Boys & Girls Clubs of America, most recently in 2007, 57%said their Club literally saved their life and 51% achieved a higher level of education than they thought possible because they were inspired by their Club participation. Nationally, 21% of African-American males do not graduate from high school, while only 2% of Boys & Girls Club African-American males do not finish.
Last month I wrote a column lauding the designation of September 11th as an official day of service. That call came about last year from then-Presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama at Columbia University and was made official this year by now-President Obama.
?To equate the tragedy of 9/11 with ?volunteerism? is a travesty,? one reader wrote in response to that column. ?We remember what happened on that day for what it was: an attack on US civilians on US soil.?
Why are those two points mutually exclusive? Wasn?t our shared humanity heightened by those attacks on our country? Some people feel called because of it.
The travesty, actually, would be watching our military do all the heavy lifting while most of our citizens live as if nothing has changed. We cannot all don the uniforms, get in the trenches, and endure the rigorous training. We cannot all leave our families and risk our lives every minute of every day. But we can do something besides sit back and criticize.
It?s almost embarrassing to say I did my part for one day by standing in a beautiful room amidst eye-popping décor. But really, isn?t the key figuring out what you are particularly equipped to do and then committing to it? These days, when fewer people are inclined to write a check, there are organizations galore looking for your special touch.
Give it to them. It?s a win-win. Trust me.
Nancy Colasurdo is a practicing life coach and freelance writer. Her Web site is www.nancola.com. Please direct all questions/comments to FOXGamePlan@gmail.com. (more…)
Filed under: personalfinancenewsss.wordpress.com | Tags: like, Look, Volunteerism, What

I spent an afternoon this week near-giddy because I was standing next to a compelling sculpture of a woman?s torso by the amazing artist Louise Bourgeois. It was beautifully showcased in the center of a closet that was actually a small room of mirrored doors located off a dazzling master bedroom.
This gives you an idea of my oh-so-grueling assignment as a volunteer for the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Manhattan Designer House Tour. You know, listening to Sinatra courtesy of Jonathan Schwartz while marveling at a round white bed flanked by round glass end tables and admiring a stunning Philip Porcella photograph, all the while greeting enthused participants of the tour.
Tough to be me, I know. But carry on I did as people stopped and stared in awe at the white room with purple and lavender accents. Truly I can?t do the home décor of Kris Fuchs — principal of SUITE New York, a contemporary furniture and modern design showroom on Madison Avenue — justice in this space, but there is a bigger point. While I was listening to ?ooh-ing? and ?aah-ing? in a delightful atmosphere, a terrific organization whose mission is to ?improve and enhance the quality of life for all young people, ages 6 to 18? was raking in the dough to the tune of $150 per ticket.
This is volunteerism. Sometimes when it feels like life is coming at us from too many directions, we put off the idea of volunteering because it just seems like another thing on our plate. This was one day of my life, one enriching day of meeting new people and seeing the crème de la crème of home design up close.
?You didn?t do anything with the kids [from the Boys & Girls Club]?? a friend asked about my assignment.
That?s the beauty of volunteering. You can go with your strengths. Two of mine are putting people at ease and striking up conversations. It?s all needed. It all matters.
?It is with great angst that I address you this year with the acknowledgement that we are all not doing as well financially as we have in the past,? wrote Daniel Quintero, executive director of the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club, in the organization?s 2008 annual report. ?That being said, our experience during the tough economic times is that our services are needed much more, and the demand becomes greater.?
According to three national alumni surveys conducted for Boys & Girls Clubs of America, most recently in 2007, 57%said their Club literally saved their life and 51% achieved a higher level of education than they thought possible because they were inspired by their Club participation. Nationally, 21% of African-American males do not graduate from high school, while only 2% of Boys & Girls Club African-American males do not finish.
Last month I wrote a column lauding the designation of September 11th as an official day of service. That call came about last year from then-Presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama at Columbia University and was made official this year by now-President Obama.
?To equate the tragedy of 9/11 with ?volunteerism? is a travesty,? one reader wrote in response to that column. ?We remember what happened on that day for what it was: an attack on US civilians on US soil.?
Why are those two points mutually exclusive? Wasn?t our shared humanity heightened by those attacks on our country? Some people feel called because of it.
The travesty, actually, would be watching our military do all the heavy lifting while most of our citizens live as if nothing has changed. We cannot all don the uniforms, get in the trenches, and endure the rigorous training. We cannot all leave our families and risk our lives every minute of every day. But we can do something besides sit back and criticize.
It?s almost embarrassing to say I did my part for one day by standing in a beautiful room amidst eye-popping décor. But really, isn?t the key figuring out what you are particularly equipped to do and then committing to it? These days, when fewer people are inclined to write a check, there are organizations galore looking for your special touch.
Give it to them. It?s a win-win. Trust me.
Nancy Colasurdo is a practicing life coach and freelance writer. Her Web site is www.nancola.com. Please direct all questions/comments to FOXGamePlan@gmail.com. (more…)
Filed under: personalfinancenewsss.wordpress.com | Tags: like, Look, Volunteerism, What

I spent an afternoon this week near-giddy because I was standing next to a compelling sculpture of a woman?s torso by the amazing artist Louise Bourgeois. It was beautifully showcased in the center of a closet that was actually a small room of mirrored doors located off a dazzling master bedroom.
This gives you an idea of my oh-so-grueling assignment as a volunteer for the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Manhattan Designer House Tour. You know, listening to Sinatra courtesy of Jonathan Schwartz while marveling at a round white bed flanked by round glass end tables and admiring a stunning Philip Porcella photograph, all the while greeting enthused participants of the tour.
Tough to be me, I know. But carry on I did as people stopped and stared in awe at the white room with purple and lavender accents. Truly I can?t do the home décor of Kris Fuchs — principal of SUITE New York, a contemporary furniture and modern design showroom on Madison Avenue — justice in this space, but there is a bigger point. While I was listening to ?ooh-ing? and ?aah-ing? in a delightful atmosphere, a terrific organization whose mission is to ?improve and enhance the quality of life for all young people, ages 6 to 18? was raking in the dough to the tune of $150 per ticket.
This is volunteerism. Sometimes when it feels like life is coming at us from too many directions, we put off the idea of volunteering because it just seems like another thing on our plate. This was one day of my life, one enriching day of meeting new people and seeing the crème de la crème of home design up close.
?You didn?t do anything with the kids [from the Boys & Girls Club]?? a friend asked about my assignment.
That?s the beauty of volunteering. You can go with your strengths. Two of mine are putting people at ease and striking up conversations. It?s all needed. It all matters.
?It is with great angst that I address you this year with the acknowledgement that we are all not doing as well financially as we have in the past,? wrote Daniel Quintero, executive director of the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club, in the organization?s 2008 annual report. ?That being said, our experience during the tough economic times is that our services are needed much more, and the demand becomes greater.?
According to three national alumni surveys conducted for Boys & Girls Clubs of America, most recently in 2007, 57%said their Club literally saved their life and 51% achieved a higher level of education than they thought possible because they were inspired by their Club participation. Nationally, 21% of African-American males do not graduate from high school, while only 2% of Boys & Girls Club African-American males do not finish.
Last month I wrote a column lauding the designation of September 11th as an official day of service. That call came about last year from then-Presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama at Columbia University and was made official this year by now-President Obama.
?To equate the tragedy of 9/11 with ?volunteerism? is a travesty,? one reader wrote in response to that column. ?We remember what happened on that day for what it was: an attack on US civilians on US soil.?
Why are those two points mutually exclusive? Wasn?t our shared humanity heightened by those attacks on our country? Some people feel called because of it.
The travesty, actually, would be watching our military do all the heavy lifting while most of our citizens live as if nothing has changed. We cannot all don the uniforms, get in the trenches, and endure the rigorous training. We cannot all leave our families and risk our lives every minute of every day. But we can do something besides sit back and criticize.
It?s almost embarrassing to say I did my part for one day by standing in a beautiful room amidst eye-popping décor. But really, isn?t the key figuring out what you are particularly equipped to do and then committing to it? These days, when fewer people are inclined to write a check, there are organizations galore looking for your special touch.
Give it to them. It?s a win-win. Trust me.
Nancy Colasurdo is a practicing life coach and freelance writer. Her Web site is www.nancola.com. Please direct all questions/comments to FOXGamePlan@gmail.com. (more…)
Filed under: personalfinancenewsss.wordpress.com | Tags: like, Look, Volunteerism, What

I spent an afternoon this week near-giddy because I was standing next to a compelling sculpture of a woman?s torso by the amazing artist Louise Bourgeois. It was beautifully showcased in the center of a closet that was actually a small room of mirrored doors located off a dazzling master bedroom.
This gives you an idea of my oh-so-grueling assignment as a volunteer for the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Manhattan Designer House Tour. You know, listening to Sinatra courtesy of Jonathan Schwartz while marveling at a round white bed flanked by round glass end tables and admiring a stunning Philip Porcella photograph, all the while greeting enthused participants of the tour.
Tough to be me, I know. But carry on I did as people stopped and stared in awe at the white room with purple and lavender accents. Truly I can?t do the home décor of Kris Fuchs — principal of SUITE New York, a contemporary furniture and modern design showroom on Madison Avenue — justice in this space, but there is a bigger point. While I was listening to ?ooh-ing? and ?aah-ing? in a delightful atmosphere, a terrific organization whose mission is to ?improve and enhance the quality of life for all young people, ages 6 to 18? was raking in the dough to the tune of $150 per ticket.
This is volunteerism. Sometimes when it feels like life is coming at us from too many directions, we put off the idea of volunteering because it just seems like another thing on our plate. This was one day of my life, one enriching day of meeting new people and seeing the crème de la crème of home design up close.
?You didn?t do anything with the kids [from the Boys & Girls Club]?? a friend asked about my assignment.
That?s the beauty of volunteering. You can go with your strengths. Two of mine are putting people at ease and striking up conversations. It?s all needed. It all matters.
?It is with great angst that I address you this year with the acknowledgement that we are all not doing as well financially as we have in the past,? wrote Daniel Quintero, executive director of the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club, in the organization?s 2008 annual report. ?That being said, our experience during the tough economic times is that our services are needed much more, and the demand becomes greater.?
According to three national alumni surveys conducted for Boys & Girls Clubs of America, most recently in 2007, 57%said their Club literally saved their life and 51% achieved a higher level of education than they thought possible because they were inspired by their Club participation. Nationally, 21% of African-American males do not graduate from high school, while only 2% of Boys & Girls Club African-American males do not finish.
Last month I wrote a column lauding the designation of September 11th as an official day of service. That call came about last year from then-Presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama at Columbia University and was made official this year by now-President Obama.
?To equate the tragedy of 9/11 with ?volunteerism? is a travesty,? one reader wrote in response to that column. ?We remember what happened on that day for what it was: an attack on US civilians on US soil.?
Why are those two points mutually exclusive? Wasn?t our shared humanity heightened by those attacks on our country? Some people feel called because of it.
The travesty, actually, would be watching our military do all the heavy lifting while most of our citizens live as if nothing has changed. We cannot all don the uniforms, get in the trenches, and endure the rigorous training. We cannot all leave our families and risk our lives every minute of every day. But we can do something besides sit back and criticize.
It?s almost embarrassing to say I did my part for one day by standing in a beautiful room amidst eye-popping décor. But really, isn?t the key figuring out what you are particularly equipped to do and then committing to it? These days, when fewer people are inclined to write a check, there are organizations galore looking for your special touch.
Give it to them. It?s a win-win. Trust me.
Nancy Colasurdo is a practicing life coach and freelance writer. Her Web site is www.nancola.com. Please direct all questions/comments to FOXGamePlan@gmail.com. (more…)
Filed under: personalfinancenewsss.wordpress.com | Tags: like, Look, Volunteerism, What

I spent an afternoon this week near-giddy because I was standing next to a compelling sculpture of a woman?s torso by the amazing artist Louise Bourgeois. It was beautifully showcased in the center of a closet that was actually a small room of mirrored doors located off a dazzling master bedroom.
This gives you an idea of my oh-so-grueling assignment as a volunteer for the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Manhattan Designer House Tour. You know, listening to Sinatra courtesy of Jonathan Schwartz while marveling at a round white bed flanked by round glass end tables and admiring a stunning Philip Porcella photograph, all the while greeting enthused participants of the tour.
Tough to be me, I know. But carry on I did as people stopped and stared in awe at the white room with purple and lavender accents. Truly I can?t do the home décor of Kris Fuchs — principal of SUITE New York, a contemporary furniture and modern design showroom on Madison Avenue — justice in this space, but there is a bigger point. While I was listening to ?ooh-ing? and ?aah-ing? in a delightful atmosphere, a terrific organization whose mission is to ?improve and enhance the quality of life for all young people, ages 6 to 18? was raking in the dough to the tune of $150 per ticket.
This is volunteerism. Sometimes when it feels like life is coming at us from too many directions, we put off the idea of volunteering because it just seems like another thing on our plate. This was one day of my life, one enriching day of meeting new people and seeing the crème de la crème of home design up close.
?You didn?t do anything with the kids [from the Boys & Girls Club]?? a friend asked about my assignment.
That?s the beauty of volunteering. You can go with your strengths. Two of mine are putting people at ease and striking up conversations. It?s all needed. It all matters.
?It is with great angst that I address you this year with the acknowledgement that we are all not doing as well financially as we have in the past,? wrote Daniel Quintero, executive director of the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club, in the organization?s 2008 annual report. ?That being said, our experience during the tough economic times is that our services are needed much more, and the demand becomes greater.?
According to three national alumni surveys conducted for Boys & Girls Clubs of America, most recently in 2007, 57%said their Club literally saved their life and 51% achieved a higher level of education than they thought possible because they were inspired by their Club participation. Nationally, 21% of African-American males do not graduate from high school, while only 2% of Boys & Girls Club African-American males do not finish.
Last month I wrote a column lauding the designation of September 11th as an official day of service. That call came about last year from then-Presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama at Columbia University and was made official this year by now-President Obama.
?To equate the tragedy of 9/11 with ?volunteerism? is a travesty,? one reader wrote in response to that column. ?We remember what happened on that day for what it was: an attack on US civilians on US soil.?
Why are those two points mutually exclusive? Wasn?t our shared humanity heightened by those attacks on our country? Some people feel called because of it.
The travesty, actually, would be watching our military do all the heavy lifting while most of our citizens live as if nothing has changed. We cannot all don the uniforms, get in the trenches, and endure the rigorous training. We cannot all leave our families and risk our lives every minute of every day. But we can do something besides sit back and criticize.
It?s almost embarrassing to say I did my part for one day by standing in a beautiful room amidst eye-popping décor. But really, isn?t the key figuring out what you are particularly equipped to do and then committing to it? These days, when fewer people are inclined to write a check, there are organizations galore looking for your special touch.
Give it to them. It?s a win-win. Trust me.
Nancy Colasurdo is a practicing life coach and freelance writer. Her Web site is www.nancola.com. Please direct all questions/comments to FOXGamePlan@gmail.com. (more…)

Let’s say we’re trying to help someone make a career choice and this is what we know: she has a strong interest in history, a fervent desire to help others, and an affinity for seniors because she has a much-loved grandparent. And, well, there’s fluency in Spanish and a degree in social work. Where does the equation take us?
For Laura Radensky, this combination has added up to nearly 20 years of meaningful work at Jewish Home Lifecare, which provides adult day care and home care for senior citizens in Manhattan, the Bronx and Westchester. She recently transitioned from director of social work to community liaison.
“It’s what I’m supposed to be doing,” Radensky said in a recent interview.
Truly, a life coach can’t hear that often enough. It’s the very statement that makes us want to dissect the equation again and again so we can impart it to clients.
In the case of Radensky, a native of Los Angeles, it began with undergraduate work at Berkeley followed by what was supposed to be two years of social-work school at Columbia University.
“I ended up falling in love with New York City,” Radensky said.
Her first internship placement was with Jewish Home Lifecare in the Bronx. She was fascinated with the historical perspective that came with the job. For example, many people in Harlem were part of a migration from North Carolina in the 1950s. Within the Hispanic community, she learned, those of Puerto Rican descent have generally been here longer than those from the Dominican Republic. And she has seen different styles of how people keep their homes and the shrines they create.
“It’s all a piece of somebody’s history,” Radensky said.
While recent advancements in Radensky’s career don’t allow for as much hands-on work with clients, she is excited about being involved in the planning and having input on decisions influencing senior citizens’ daily lives at a macro level.
“One of the reasons I’ve stayed so long [at Jewish Home Lifecare] is that we are very much looking toward the newest things clinically,” Radensky said. For example, JHL got in on the use of telehealth units very early and it helped augment their home care program by providing a layer of security for elders. The center is also very involved in decreasing elder abuse by training people who interact with seniors to see the signs. And there is an overall focus on wellness and what senior centers can do to foster that.
In addition to her full-time work outside the home, Radensky is the mother of four children ranging from ages 7 to 17. Occasionally she gets to blend her two worlds, like when she’s preparing a Power Point presentation at home and one of her kids says, “Mom, I can make that so much better.” Her two oldest children have done volunteer work at JHL in the summer through a youth employment program.
“I’m so happy they get that kind of exposure,” Radensky said. “I could see the effect this past summer. My 14-year-old asked, ‘How does dementia work?’ and ‘Are they really allowed to smoke cigarettes?’ It was interesting to see that process.”
What her children really get to see is a mother who chose to follow her passion in her work life.
“Social work is not the most financially remunerative employment,” Radensky said with a laugh.
So how would she advise someone who is about to embark on a social work career?
“Funny you ask,” she said. “My 17-year-old daughter and I just went to her college night at school and she wants to go into teaching. We were on the bus riding back from New Jersey and she’s telling me how passionately she wants to be a teacher. I was thinking how about nursing, there’s a shortage, it pays more. And then I stopped myself. I remember my father having that same conversation with me.”
And so it goes. The equation gets passed down from one generation to the next.
Nancy Colasurdo is a practicing life coach and freelance writer. Her Web site is www.nancola.com. Please direct all questions/comments to FOXGamePlan@gmail.com.



