Dear Mr. Sparks,
This is how I am spending my weekend. At my desk, watching movies of your books and catching up on this blog.
I have been so incredibly busy that I am very behind. But I am determined to catch up! THIS week!
Because this project is too important.
Because these children need your voice.
Because as loud and stubborn as I am and as many incredible volunteers that we have... we are not loud enough.
Ironically as I went grocery shopping this morning before I started writing, the Outreach NC magazine was sitting on the shelf. What a great article about you! What incredible timing to see that on the store magazine rack. I'm taking it as a sign.
Sincerely,
Dawn Torrence Williamson
Dedicated CDH mom and charity president
Showing posts with label Wake Forest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wake Forest. Show all posts
Saturday, October 10, 2015
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
August 5 - Dear Nicholas Sparks
Dear Mr. Sparks,
Today I went to a women's networking meeting here in downtown Wake Forest, NC.
They are another exclusive networking group and their charity seat is open. CHERUBS is competing for the seat with 4 other charities. We each had to talk about our charities, what we do and how the group could help. Our charity was the only national one.
I knew going in that we would not get the spot. That's not being negative, it's just a fact that we've come to accept after 20 years. Being a national charity and not locally based (like a food bank, coats for kids, local grieving support, etc)... the odds were stacked against us. Add in that no one has ever heard of of Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia and we were going to come in last in the competition. People want a quick fix, feel-good-in-the-moment charity most often. That's ok. But that's not us.
Despite having the most people in need, a 5-star rating, national exposure and being a charity for critically ill babies vying for the support of a room full of moms and grandmothers... we lost. And that's ok.
My point to today's letter that it is so hard for us to help these children. Even in our own neighborhoods. Even literally 2 doors down from our office. Even when our community just lost a baby to CDH.
CDH is not a quick fix cause, but then neither is Autism, Spina Bifida or Cystic Fibrosis. The difference is that those causes have awareness. They have loud voices. Those families are getting help. They are getting hope.
CDH desperately needs a voice too.
Sincerely,
Dawn M. Torrence Williamson
CHERUBS President & Founder
Today I went to a women's networking meeting here in downtown Wake Forest, NC.
They are another exclusive networking group and their charity seat is open. CHERUBS is competing for the seat with 4 other charities. We each had to talk about our charities, what we do and how the group could help. Our charity was the only national one.
I knew going in that we would not get the spot. That's not being negative, it's just a fact that we've come to accept after 20 years. Being a national charity and not locally based (like a food bank, coats for kids, local grieving support, etc)... the odds were stacked against us. Add in that no one has ever heard of of Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia and we were going to come in last in the competition. People want a quick fix, feel-good-in-the-moment charity most often. That's ok. But that's not us.
Despite having the most people in need, a 5-star rating, national exposure and being a charity for critically ill babies vying for the support of a room full of moms and grandmothers... we lost. And that's ok.
My point to today's letter that it is so hard for us to help these children. Even in our own neighborhoods. Even literally 2 doors down from our office. Even when our community just lost a baby to CDH.
CDH is not a quick fix cause, but then neither is Autism, Spina Bifida or Cystic Fibrosis. The difference is that those causes have awareness. They have loud voices. Those families are getting help. They are getting hope.
CDH desperately needs a voice too.
Sincerely,
Dawn M. Torrence Williamson
CHERUBS President & Founder
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