GoodThings

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GoodThings
The GoodLetter    Thursday, July 11, 2002
GoodThings, Inc. :: Stories, actions, ideas, and greeting cards that connect us.


GoodThings

In this week's issue:
:: Favorite GoodThings GoodThings
From Rudmer de Vries of Leiden, The Netherlands
:: This Week's Feature GoodThings
Means To A Better End - by Judith Perry
:: Card of the Week GoodThings
Colorful Voices -- GoodThings Greeting Cards on sale now!
:: 2001 Spotlight GoodThings
Favorite International Health Organization: PATH
:: Good Gravy GoodThings
Music: This Land Is Your Land: Songs of Freedom
Film: The Candidate
:: The Upshot GoodThings
A GoodLetter reader in Chicago is thankful for "Adopt A Grandparent"
:: Housekeeping GoodThings
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A few favorite goodthings from Rudmer de Vries of Leiden, The Netherlands:

"Reading the morning paper in the sun. Sailing without a purpose. Amsterdam canals in the rain at night. Thousands of lights on the Ganges. Writing a poem in the train. Unexpected visits. Being welcomed by my parents' dog."

What are YOUR favorite goodthings? Read more




GoodThings
Greeting Card of the Week

Colorful Voices: If I were in charge of the world...

Did you know our Colorful Voices cards feature the voices of real children and the sales of their cards go to support elementary school arts education programs? Elizabeth, age 8, is the dinosaur lover responsible for this week's featured card. We recently asked Elizabeth a few prying questions:

GoodThings: In your opinion, what is good? Elizabeth: Birds.
GTS: What is bad? Elizabeth: Almond paste.
GTS: What do you want to be when you grow up? Elizabeth: A bird scientist.
GTS: What do you like about summer? Elizabeth: I can go hiking and bird watching.

Buy just one pack of 8 greeting cards for only $12.50 or a few single cards for $2.50 each (plus shipping/handling) and help make it possible for us to continue promoting positive and constructive organizations, ideas, and people. We can't do it without you. Don't forget: you can also choose from all our cards to create a variety pack of all your favorites! (We print all our cards on recycled paper using soy ink.)

Would your non-profit organization or progressive company like to use customized GoodThings Greeting Cards for your holiday or membership correspondence or for fundraising? Send an e-mail to cards@goodthings.com and ask us about our card customization program!

Please visit our online store today


Click the card to see it enlarged or to order

Text on card: If I were in charge of the world...everyone would have a cat and there'd be a dinosaur in my backyard


Inside: blank
(friendship, general)
GoodThings

GoodThings

This Week's Feature

Means to A Better End

Women whose incomes fall well below the poverty level often have to choose between feeding their children and health care. One organization is helping homeless women avoid having to make that choice.


Editor's Note: Women of Means, Inc. is a non-profit that provides services for homeless and disadvantaged women who range in age from 18 to 90 years old. The only option for many of them is to receive costly emergency services. Women of Means is free and convenient. There are no forms to fill out. Women can even withhold their real names. The doctors take time to listen to their stories and welcome and encourage follow-up visits. Most return. This model of care has given the most defenseless of women confidence to venture out for essential services and has saved lives. This is the story of one such life.

Dear GoodLetter readers,

Barbara lay snuggled in her bed that cold winter morning. As she talked with her friend on the telephone, she was suddenly interrupted by a loud knocking at her door. Startled, she threw the phone down and jumped from her bed. As she peeped through the door she saw the figure of a man who she recognized as a tenant on the floor below. Afraid that he would wake the neighbors with his banging, Barbara cracked open the door -- leaving the chain lock in place. "What do you want?" she asked.

He immediately started screaming at her, accusing her of waking him up with all the noise she was making. "What noise?" she asked, confused. "I haven't even gotten out of bed yet."

As she spoke, he became more and more enraged. He forced open the door with the weight of his body and rushed into the room, pushing her aside. He noticed the phone lying on the bed. Barbara rushed toward the phone threatening to call the police. The man fled. Two days later, Barbara's door was kicked in, her apartment was vandalized, and her family treasures were stolen.

Frightened and bewildered, Barbara sat on the bed crying. How had she ended up here? This was such a dangerous neighborhood and so far from the safe suburban community where she had spent most of her life. Feeling ever more depressed and helpless, she realized that she had had little choice in the matter.

Barbara came from a middle-class family. She was the youngest of three children. Her father was a civil engineer and her mother was a homemaker. She lived a pretty ordinary life growing up. She stayed close to home. She never married. After her father died, she remained at home to help her mom. The two older siblings had long since moved on and made separate lives for themselves.

Twenty years passed, and Barbara learned her mother was terminally ill. Barbara's life started falling apart. She started drinking and was devastated when her mother soon passed away. Middle-aged and alone, being with her family had been all she'd known. She sought therapy that ended up only marginally helping matters.

Her brother re-entered the picture to take charge of settling their late parents' estate. Barbara was asked to move out of the house and rent a room until the family home could be sold and the proceeds divided among the three children. She continued drinking to drown out her sorrow and loneliness.

After many months, Barbara became traumatized by more bad news: her brother had gambled away nearly all of the family inheritance. She was literally destitute. Her drinking increased, and she faced a grim future of temporary rooms and apartments. A few years later, her brother died suddenly, and she became increasingly estranged from her sister. There was no one to help her out.

And so here she was. In a run-down apartment, in a dangerous part of the city, being threatened by a man twice her size. Robbed, violated, terrified. Nothing in her life had prepared her for this.

This degree of vulnerability led to further drinking and depression. Barbara soon became homeless. Her health was failing. She was declared legally blind. She had developed a heart murmur. And long years of neglect had ruined her teeth. Humiliation and shame about her homelessness, however, kept her from following through on regular medical care.

To escape loneliness and boredom, Barbara spent her days at Women's Lunch Place, a day shelter for women who were down and out. It was a safe space that offered nutritious meals and companionship. It was here in 1998 that she met Dr. Roseanna Means. Dr. Means offered free medical care to the women. All one had to do was write her name on a clipboard and "Dr. Roseanna" would take care of the problem.

Barbara was drawn to Dr. Means' genuine warmth. She finally got up the nerve to ask for help. At first, all she wanted was her blood pressure taken. But she soon found herself making weekly visits to the doctor and telling more and more about her past. Dr. Roseanna empathized and listened patiently. Barbara began to trust a doctor for the first time in many years.

One day, Dr. Roseanna suggested that Barbara come to her private office for a full physical. Barbara was nervous, but she went. Dr. Roseanna detected irregularities with Barbara's heart and ordered a series of tests. The murmur that Barbara had been told was "nothing to worry about" turned out to be part of a life-threatening condition. A careful family medical history revealed that Barbara's father and brother had died of the same conditions that threatened her, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (where the heart muscle gets enlarged so as to block even blood flow) and ventricular fibrillation (a heart rhythm that could cause sudden death).

She would need a defibrillator placed under the skin of her chest that would be wired to her heart to make it stay in normal rhythm; she would need to get her dental hygiene restored; she would need to control her smoking habit; and she would have to take heart medicine for the rest of her life. Dr. Roseanna promised to help her get through it all.

Dr. Roseanna helped her find a therapist, and a psychiatrist who prescribed medicine for her depression. She saw dentists and an oral surgeon who pulled out most of her teeth. And there were more heart tests and two cardiologists: one who looked at the big picture, the other who would insert the pacemaker. At each step, scared and uncertain, she wanted to back out. But ultimately, she got the support -- and the pacemaker -- she needed.

Barbara got that support because Dr. Roseanna Means saw her every week for the two years it took to diagnose and treat her heart condition. Week after week, Dr. Roseanna went to the day shelter, sat with Barbara, and patiently calmed her fears. She called Barbara in the evenings and on weekends. She knew that if she were to sink back into depression or to have a relapse of her alcoholism, her life might be in danger. And all of the care that Dr. Means gave Barbara was free. That is the model of Dr. Means' non-profit organization, Women of Means.

In the past year, Barbara's heart condition has been completely controlled, she is well on her way to getting a set of dentures, and she has almost stopped smoking. This past March, she moved into her own apartment -- one that's safe, comfortable and attractive -- for the first time in 15 years. Barbara has found her way home, and the way she feels about Dr. Roseanna is heartfelt: "They don't come any better."

:: Judith Perry
Boston, Massachusetts

(Thoughts on Judith's GoodLetter? Inspired by what you've read? E-mail us -- don't forget to tell us your name, where you're from, and if we can use your words in a future GoodLetter or on our Web site.)


TALK ABOUT IT
Are you aware of other examples of how committed individuals and organizations are making quality health care more available to the people who need it most? Share your stories and ideas.

LEARN MORE ABOUT IT
Women of Means, Inc. is a non-profit organization that provides free health care to homeless women and children. WOM currently has 12 doctors providing care in safe shelters and drop-in centers in the Boston area. Through these localized, site-specific programs, WOM meets the health needs of hundreds of folks who are at risk and underserved by the health care system. The group's mission: "To improve the lives of women who are homeless or marginally housed through quality health care, education, and advocacy."

:: Learn more on the Web site WomenOfMeans.org.

:: Learn more about Women's Lunch Place.

Learn about other unique examples of inclusive, progressive public health.

:: Israel's Hadassah Medical Organization treats both Israelis and Palestinians.

:: Listen to an inspiring piece on the Hadassah Medical Organization on NPR's Fresh Air with Terry Gross.

:: Explore photographer Sebastio Salgado's astonishing visual efforts to increase awareness of the quest to end polio throughout the world by 2005 at EndOfPolio.org.

DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT
:: Are you a health-care professional? Consider donating some of your time to Women of Means.

:: Donate directly to Women's Lunch Place to support their continued work.

GoodThings

GoodThings
Favorite GoodThings 2001 Spotlight

Every other week, we use this space to remind you about the extraordinary work of one of our Favorite GoodThings 2001 campaign honorees. The profiles of our honorees -- a wealth of ideas, actions, and organizations for a better world -- have a special home on our Web site. Check them out and be sure to let us know what you think.

This week, in keeping with this week's GoodLetter about inclusive, empowering views of public health, we're happy to feature our "Favorite International Health Organization" for 2001, one of America's true father figures:

PATH (Program for Appropriate Technology in Health)
This non-profit's ambitious mission is to improve health around the world, particularly that of women and children. PATH focuses on improving the quality of reproductive health services available to people in developing countries, as well as on preventing and reducing the impact of widespread communicable diseases. Through partnerships with local clinics, community-based groups, ministries of health, non-governmental organizations, private companies, and funding agencies, they work to bring affordable health-related technologies to resource-poor populations. Their services range from family planning to providing health workers with products, supplies, and training. PATH is recognized not only for its success in building and sustaining working relationships in both the public and private sectors, but also for effectively helping the people most in need around the world.

:: Learn more about PATH.

We love to hear from you about anything: ideas or situations that are inspiring you or challenging you to think, as well as organizations, programs, and people that contribute to your community and the world everyday. Please drop us a line.

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The Upshot

Thanks to all of you who have sent your "Good Gratitude" letters to help us launch our newest feature. We're inspired! Please keep them coming! We're publishing a new "Good Gratitude" letter every other week. You provide the thank you letters, and we'll provide links to help you make some grateful in your world.

This week, we hear some "Good Gratitude" from GoodLetter reader Janice of Chicago:

"Last year, my mother was in her final stages of life and still lived alone. I lived two hours away, was working full-time, and had my own children. So I spent as much time as I could with her, but it simply wasn't enough. More than anything else, Mom was lonely. One day, I noticed an article about a local college's "Adopt a Grandparent" program. I signed Mom up the next day, and it was the best medicine any doctor or I could have ever prescribed. Julia showed up about two weeks later, and over the course of the next few months, she and Mom became friends. During her visits, Julia eagerly listened to the stories of Mom's youth. They went grocery shopping together. They even created a small flower garden. So, I wanted to thank Julia for coming into our lives and befriending an old woman for the nine months before she died. And I wanted to thank the people who created the "Adopt a Grandparent" program for recognizing that it's sometimes simple human connection that really can make a magical difference in our lives."

Find out about similar volunteer opportunities in your area from Volunteer Match.

Check out Little Brothers - Friends of the Elderly, a non-profit organization that helps forge lasting friendships between the elderly and younger people in their communities. Their antidote to loneliness is inspiring.

WHAT ARE YOU THANKFUL FOR? WHO HAS MEANT SOMETHING TO YOU? Let the world know how much you appreciate the people and things that have made a difference in your life. Send your best thank-you letters to gratitude@goodthings.com -- and don't forget to tell us your name and where you're from.

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Good Gravy
Music, Books, Films, and Radio
Please click through to our Web site to see what we're reading, watching, and listening to and, while you're at it, let us know what we're missing.

Great New Music!
This Land Is Your Land: Songs of Freedom Various Artists (2002)
In the tradition of Woody Guthrie, this wonderful collection of folk songs asks hard questions about the world but reflects a musical legacy of true patriotism. Read the review.

Great Movie Rental!
The Candidate (1972)
In a political climate where commitment to strongly held principles is hard to find among those running for public office, Robert Redford's classic role as a passionate candidate thrust into the chaos of a campaign rings true in this Michael Ritchie film. Read the review.


GoodThings on Public Radio
Have you been checking out GoodThings on Public Radio? Here are some of our favorite public radio pieces this week (follow the link below to the full summaries on our Web site):

:: The Freedom to Read -- A woman hears a story on public radio as a call to action. The result is a new non-profit and an extraordinary gift to the Kabul, Afghanistan library.

:: A Lesson in Buying Recycled -- New York City has suspended its glass and plastics recycling program. Blame it on September 11, but what it really comes down to is that we don't pay enough attention to buying recycled.

:: Peace Like A Rose -- Rose Martin knows what it means to be down and out. She also knows what it means to change your life, and she's dedicated her life to helping others do just that.

:: The Freshest Voice -- Kenneth Koch's poetry was fresh. It made readers laugh, and it helped them realize anyone has the power to express themselves in words.

:: A Union Without Borders -- Like the model European Union to the north, the governments of the vast African continent have formed an alliance dedicated to peaceful collaboration.

:: "Public Health As A Corner Store" -- Soon-to-be medical student Joe Wright has taken his passion for fighting AIDS from the mean streets to the sterile laboratories and back again.

:: A Fundamental Connection -- Former US President Jimmy Carter's grandson Jason has a new book that shows it's all in the family when it comes to making a difference in the world.

Visit our site to read full summaries of these stories and listen to your favorites.


Talk to us:
What's the best public radio story you've heard this week?


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Housekeeping

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© 2002 GoodThings, Inc. All rights reserved, but we love it when you forward the GoodLetter with abandon.

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