Tuesday, December 17, 2013

"No one person, group or agency can do it alone."

Einstein and Mandela

Albert Einstein didn't speak until he was four years old and didn't read until age seven. 
His teachers believed he was mentally handicapped. 

But Einstein just had a different way of thinking. 

He went on to win the Nobel Prize in physics.


We are proud of the children in our program at Quality Life Center. We push them. We know
they are beautiful, smart and talented, each in their own way. We are proud to note their gains:




· 86% of Quality Life Center summer camp children and youth increased their math skills or maintained an A or B grade level.

· 88% of Quality Life Center summer camp children and youth increased their reading skills or 
maintained an A or B grade level.

· 83% of youth who completed the afterschool and/or summer camp program increased their 
knowledge and demonstration of positive behavior, leadership and social skills.

We try to remember children learn differently – Einstein thought in pictures - when one
approach does not work, we need to try another. We hope they know that when we correct
them, it comes from a place of love and compassion. We want them to be strong, confident adults who are comfortable in any situation, and among any person they encounter.

A wise person once said one should strive to have strength and confidence in order to “walk in the world without fear, so your mind is free to learn new things.” Ok, QLC Executive Director/Black Belt Muhammed said that during a martial arts class. But the idea translates to a variety of contexts.


Exposure. Demystifying the world. How else will a child know if she or he has a passion for business, inventing, finance, science, communication, fighting for justice?


That child walking down the street may be the next Oprah Winfrey, the next Chris Gardner, the next Nelson Mandela.

Every child must be nurtured, to be allowed to find their interests and pursue them.

Nelson Mandela’s father died when he was 9 years old. He was expelled from college for
fighting a system he believed was wrong.


We owe it to our children to work together to make opportunities a possibility. 

In some ways, our community has made great strides. In other ways, the needle has not moved. Our children need more – and higher quality – education. Our community needs more resources: more and better job opportunities. The long-term health of our citizens needs to be a priority.








No one person, group or agency can do it alone.











Quality Life Center is hosting a free Kwanzaa celebration on December 27th. Everyone is invited. 

One of the principles of Kwanzaa is Umoja  (Unity). 
We are all connected. Like a tree, we may only see the other leaves on our branch on a daily basis, but we are connected to the same trunk, and we are all nurtured from the same roots. Our health and well-being is interconnected.

Exercise your strength. Your contribution is important. You can participate in so many ways:

-Volunteer at your child’s school
- Prioritize reading to or with your children for 20 minutes daily
- Assist your elderly neighbor
- Walk dogs 
- Socialize cats at the nearest shelter
- Offer to help a cause you believe in. 

It will make you feel better, and you will be contributing to a stronger, healthier community that we can all take pride in.

Albert Einstein and Nelson Mandela faced challenges. But they both had families and communities who supported them. It gave them the strength to stand tall, believe in themselves, and soar.

Who will you help rise?

Contributor: Jan Sommer
jsommer@qlcswfl.org

Quality Life Center is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization transforming the community by developing the potential of at-risk youth, and instilling values of discipline, integrity and self-sufficiency. To learn more about Quality Life Center, to sign up for the next tour date, or to make a donation, call 239.334.2797 or visit http://www.qualitylifecenter.org.

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