Other Interesting Stuff



Our Little Extras: Moms Celebrate Down syndrome!

samurai boy.jpg
Classic Movies for Boys

~Mother and Child Album~

les miz.jpg
Les Miserables Book Study

maddy preset.jpg


March for Life 2009
See for yourself the face of pro-life!

100_0599.JPG

Click for Down
Syndrome news!
Jonny



My Amazon.com Wish List
Kinda like a tip jar :)

catholics come home.jpg

Barbara's Product Reviews & Giveaways

December 9, 2011 5:08 PM

World Vision artisan necklace

[Claudia is the winner of this giveaway. Thanks so much to WorldVision for sponsoring it!]


3 Ducks
$18
5 Rabbits
$80
Our family has made World Vision part of our Christmas giving for many years. One year we even went without Christmas gifts and used the money to construct a hut for orphans in Africa. As the following cartoon makes clear, when you buy a gift for someone of financing a goat or a cow for a needy family, you are giving a gift that will keep on giving.



For the past few years, we've also picked out something to give on behalf of our children's teachers and bus drivers, then printing out the gift cards with a picture on the front. Many of them have been very touched. Donors can also give to the Maximum Impact Fund with a donation not tied to a specific item, but letting World Vision direct it where necessary.

world vision necklace.jpg

This year, World Vision is giving Maximum Impact donors a free gift - like the beautiful artisan necklace I received, which reminds me to pray for World Vision beneficiaries whenever I wear it. You can see all the gifts and the threshold giving level at World Vision.

Still, I like the idea of World Vision's linking to specific animals and backpacks and other concrete items which make giving real for children to young to think abstractly, who will love the pictures and the idea of giving something special to a child halfway around the globe:
 



There is no a better time of the year than the winter holiday season to involve children and teenagers in charitable giving and teach them why the old adage, "It is better to give than to receive," is true.  World Vision offers five great ways for parents to lead by example and teach their children the true spirit of the holidays:
    
-    Consider do-it-yourself gifts, like no-sew fleece blankets that you can make with your children. Donate those blankets to a local homeless shelter.

-    Cherish the stories of your family. Have your children talk to their grandparents and write down the stories of their past. Create a book to share with the entire family or record it online.

-    As a family, select a charitable organization you'd like to support. Use online tools like Charity Navigator to find an organization that you trust. Give your children a budget and encourage them to decide how your family will donate to that organization this holiday. For example, flipping through the World Vision Gift Catalog will give children an idea of the difference they can make in other people's lives.  

-    Work with your children to create a coupon book for your neighbors that might need an extra hand this year.  Coupons could include shoveling their sidewalk, watching their children or providing a meal.

-    Bake cookies or sweets with your children and deliver them to your local nursing home or school-in-need. Get started with this list of holiday recipes.


In addition to teaching children how to give during the holidays, it is equally as important but possibly even more challenging, to show teenagers the true spirit of the holidays. World Vision Teen Engagement Expert, Michele Tvedt has several tips for parents including:

-    Start with conversation. Watch the nightly news together, and take time to discuss stories that touch on people struggling with poverty, unemployment or other tragedies. Let your teen lead the discussion and listen for them to express interest or passion in a particular social issue.

-    Begin to give teens a voice in family giving. Let your teen know you would like to give a charitable gift as a family to mark the holiday season, but that you'd love to let them be the final decision maker.

-    Take advantage of volunteering requirements that your teen may have to fulfill at school. Offer to help your teen find an organization that fits their interest. Keep in mind that teenagers are eager for authentic, powerful experiences. They will respond best to opportunities that allow them to experience poverty firsthand.

"The holiday season can be a stressful time of year. There are gifts to purchase and wrap, cookies to bake, and family and friends to visit, but when we pause to help our neighbors in need, we all experience the holidays in a more meaningful way," said Traci Coker, charitable giving expert and national director of World Vision's Gift Catalog.

For each item in World Vision's Gift Catalog, the giver makes the purchase in the name of a friend, family member or business associate. World Vision then sends special cards to those individuals, describing the gifts and their impact. Last year alone, World Vision's Gift Catalog raised $32 million and provided assistance to more than 800,000 people worldwide. The Gift Catalog launched in 1996, and while a goat ($75) is still World Vision's number one seller, there are many affordable items for $35 or less.

Hope you will consider making World Vision part of your Christmas.  And am excited that World Vision has set aside another artisan necklace for a MommyLife reader.

Please leave a comment to enter this drawing, which I will hold 12/16.
Love,
signature.gif

Bookmark and Share
Posted in Jewelry | Permalink

Comments

This is beautiful!

Posted by: Ellen | December 9, 2011 6:34 PM

I love world vision. Their gift catalog is the best place for holiday shopping. :)

Posted by: tiffany | December 9, 2011 9:11 PM

Pretty!

Posted by: Priscilla | December 9, 2011 10:32 PM

My husband and I are seriously considering doing something like that for Christmas this year!

Posted by: Thia | December 10, 2011 8:55 AM

Beautiful!

Posted by: Deborah | December 10, 2011 9:55 AM

This year, for the first time ever, we are giving World Vision gifts in addition to regular ones. We have had so many people share with us while we have been struggling with unemployment, we feel we have to share.

I saw a blog where the mom wrote that for their kids, they would give the kids 4 gifts - one they want, one they need, one to wear, and one to read.

Even that sounded like too much to me! They don't NEED anything! They surely don't need more clothes. So we will share with others this year.

I hope the kids don't mind :-)

Posted by: Patty | December 10, 2011 11:58 AM

It's a beautiful piece! I am getting one of my daughters a necklace from http://amazima.org/ = wonderful stuff.

Posted by: Sue | December 10, 2011 12:19 PM

This looks very nice!

Posted by: Lisa | December 10, 2011 1:04 PM

Beautiful

Posted by: Melinda M | December 10, 2011 1:04 PM

What a great idea! Thanks for sharing it.

Posted by: Mary Peek | December 10, 2011 3:31 PM

how wonderful!!

Posted by: lindsay | December 10, 2011 10:09 PM

This looks beautiful! Thank you for this opportunity.

Posted by: Carol | December 11, 2011 7:49 AM

Such a beautiful necklace and an opportunity to share the World Vision story

Posted by: Claudia Miller | December 11, 2011 8:42 AM

Beautiful necklace...we have purchased animals and mosquito nets from World Vision before.

Posted by: Becky S | December 11, 2011 1:56 PM

What a beautiful neckace. We have given similar gifts through Samaritan's Purse, sometimes in memory of someone who has passed away, rather than sending flowers. Gifts through World Vision are a wonderful way to honor someone while helping those in need.

Posted by: Nana | December 11, 2011 2:46 PM

What a beautiful necklace!

Posted by: Lynn in AK | December 11, 2011 6:34 PM

I remember my parents participating with World Vision when I was a kid. :)

Posted by: Alison S. | December 12, 2011 1:27 PM

A wonderful work of art! Thank you for the opportunity!

Posted by: Charlene | December 13, 2011 4:38 PM

So thankful for ministries like World Vision. Our son introduced us to World Vision years ago. What a beautiful necklace!

Posted by: Susan P | December 14, 2011 10:05 PM

That is gorgeous! Would be proud to win.

Posted by: Gretchen | February 1, 2012 7:21 PM

Post a comment