Saturday, March 1, 2014

Number 3: Second Life Bikes (21 Main Street, Asbury Park) Needs Your Support!!



Kerri Martin is pretty cool, and not just because she has her own Ted Talk for her witty sidewalk billboards (Go 'head and check that off the bucket list...). She also runs a very interesting Bike Shop that does repairs and restorations of old, donated bicycles.  However, her employees are not your everyday hippy, bike repair-type, but kids in the local community. Now before getting all crazy and looking up child labor laws for Jerz, you should read on...  (and can someone please let me know if I am correctly using semi-colons...)

In December, Avery and I moved to Asbury Park.  
Growing up on the Jersey shore in the nineties, Asbury Park was not exactly the vacationing hot spot for visitors it once was.  Following the race riots in the seventies, which destroyed many of the city's historical landmarks; years of crime, more than three times the national average; and a corrupt local government; the city often came with a stigma of being dangerous. However, in recent years the city has shown major signs of rejuvenation (partly through gentrification) although much of the inner city continues to struggle with poverty and high crime rates, largely gang and drug-related.

In 2006, Kerri Martin founded an after-school program called Bike Church for kids between the ages of 12-18.  In a small garage located behind a nearby church, the program was devoted to putting inner city kids to work and teaching them basic bike repair and business skills. Bike Church also hosted bike ride tours and also gave lessons for kids.  Rather than receive pay for their hard work, the kids received something better… the bike of their choice.  Her program did well in the local community.  Bicycles crammed the garage to capacity and in 2010, the program was moved to a much larger facility on main street and so began Second Life Bikes.  The shop continues to employee children in the community, many working extra hours just because they like being in the shop and working on the bikes as a hobby or for parts. (Click here for a really beautiful video that basically sums up this blog...)

So here's why we need to support them: Second Life Bikes is a non-profit youth development charitable organization and all of the money from the bikes that are sold goes back into supporting the program.  In a resuscitated area of Asbury Park, only a few blocks from the beach and the shopping district of AP, this highly coveted location has become very expensive.  The owner of this space is putting the building up for sale.  Second Life Bikes is now raising money to purchase the building so that it can continue to be a part of this community.  This program is vital to an Asbury Park where crime rates are improving but 30% of its residents are still living below the poverty line (3 times the NJ percentage), drop out rates are among the highest in the state, and only 1 out of 5 children from the community attain a degree past high school (U.S. Census). 

I visited the bike shop recently (it was near closing time, if you are wondering why the place looks quiet) and made a donation for a T-shirt (I'm broke right now... it was the best I could do!).

I am very excited to be donating to Second Life Bikes and supporting this awesome cause.  Although their Rockethub campaign has recently ended, you can still donate through their website (secondlifebikes.org) or visit the shop in person to donate, volunteer or just say hi to the awesome regulars that work there and amble through hundreds of really cool bikes.

Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.

-Thomas

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Number 2: A Most Brocious Cause

NAVLE's done... Now we are gonna start rollin' through these... :/



Yep we look like an angry emo boy band.... so what!

It was Willie's idea, (or maybe Danny's?), but I think Danny was just being lazy and said "I'm not shaving for the rest of the month." Truth is none of us wanted to shave this month, guy or girl. None of us wanted to do anything this month.  There were days I didn't want to do anything but stay in bed and imagine that November was gone.  The day's were getting shorter, Alabama was playing with new meds to treat its bipolar weather, and I was spending most of my time trying to figure out at what point the stress will end.  There's a licensing exam, then internship applications, then interviews, then ranking/matching +/- scrambling +/- finding a job.   Don't worry, it's even gibberish to me.

The rule was, whoever won "No Shave November" would get to choose the charity.  We each put in $20 (that's a lot of money when you are probably pretty close collectively to $1 million in debt) and in the end it was William Joglar (that hairy beast), who resisted the blade and was crowned this year's champion scruff machine.   (The winner was chosen by a subjective vote, since my idea to weigh our manly trimmings on a scale was deemed... gross).

The charity is the Prostate Cancer Foundation... because cancer is a sonofabitch and it's present in some form in everyone's lives. Prostate cancer affects about 15% of all men at some point in their lives and is most common in older men (Ages 40-70).  It is more common in black men (60% higher risk) and men that consume diets high in fat and/or alcoholic beverages.  Screening tests are available and should begin at age 40.  By testing early your doctor can monitor changes to the prostate size and shape to determine when more invasive diagnostic tests should be pursued. 

We chose this charity for a many sentimental and personal reasons as all of the 4 gentlemen in the photo above have or had family members continuing to fight or have fought cancer battles in the past.  This donation was just a small salute to acknowledge their fight.  This charity scored very highly on accountability and transparency (www.charitynavigator.com) and I encourage all to visit their website to learn more: www.pcf.org

One of my goals in maintaining this blog has not just been to be a better person, but hopefully create a domino effect or create some kind of small spark in my friends and family to want to do better.  We all want to be good people and live better lives and leave this world better than we entered it.  There just needs to be a place to start. So, by getting my friends and family excited about doing these with me, I think I am working towards that. See y'all soon.

-Thomas

Some helpful references:
http://www.webmd.com/prostate-cancer/default.htm
http://seer.cancer.gov/statfacts/html/prost.html
http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/prostate