First Impressions.
Day one has officially come to a close!
Our first taste of IMPACT was with Operation Sack Lunch. We spent yesterday evening working the dining hall at their downtown center. I think it was a good experience for everyone, especially me. I will say it was definitely outside of my normal volunteer wheelhouse, which is what I want. After we served dinner, we got the chance to sit down and talk with a few of the men that were there as well as the program coordinator and chef behind the evenings meal. This, of course, was wonderful because I got to connect with the people I was helping and learn about their life experiences. One gentleman I spoke with brought focus to fact that anyone can end up in his position by making just a few wrong choices. I have to say that I do and have agreed with him about this for quite some time. This is one of the aspects I most enjoy about being an American - social mobility. However, it's both puzzling and frustrating that one of my countries greatest assets is also its largest ailment. I say this because I feel that in far too many cases, it's much easier to descend to an unsavory place in life than it is to rebound or even ascend to a place of stability and prosperity. I agree that people should be held accountable for their decisions, but after a certain point it seems wholly unfair that one mistake can lock a person into a certain sect of society despite all his/her following hard work to correct that wrong and move to a brighter spot. And I guess this, in some ways, denotes the importance of safety net programs. I understand and agree that individuals must be held accountable for their decisions, but I feel that everyone should have access to basic necessities like food and shelter, regardless of what life choices they've made. Additionally, I think of Maslow's hierarchy of needs. The premise of which is that secure access to basic necessities like food, water and shelter act as a stable footing that affords individuals the capacity to focus on higher level needs like introspection and contribution to society as a whole. That's why the issue of hunger and poverty bother me so greatly because I think about how they limit one's access to this capacity, especially children who have little to no control over their environment in this regard. Not only is it disheartening to picture people living without basic necessities, it limits the collective greatness of society because fewer and fewer people are afforded the capacity to contribute to the greater good of society. So. The impetus. End hunger not just because its morally objectionable to let your fellow citizens starve, but because it practically creates a better environment for you and society as a whole. The solution. Perhaps better safety net programs, a living wage to eliminate the phenomenon of "working poor," and better educational systems that prepare youth to successfully rise into the ranks of the financial fit and prosperous.















