We’re doing something different with this month’s First Wednesday Club being the crazy kids that we are at Mamamia. Usually we nominate a charity and ask all of you to donate $10 to it. But this month, we wanted to show you that you can change someone’s life and it doesn’t have to cost you a cent. Or even take you much time. You can make a difference to someone else’s life all from the comfort of your loungeroom. Here’s how …
1. Give the gift of sight: Donate your old glasses
Bec says her first pair of glasses came in the mid 1980s. They were big. They were “electric blue”. And she claims they made her look like Melanie Griffith in Working Girl. (They didn’t. We’ve seen the photos. They actually made her look like Dustin Hoffman in Tootsie.)
Three out of every five Australians wears glasses. If you’re one of them (and you’re anything like Bec) you probably have a few pairs of old glasses sitting around in a bottom drawer.
So, here’s an idea: donate them. OneSight is a global eyewear charity that “recycles” donated glasses from stores like OPSM. For a person in a developing country or in a remote, disadvantaged part of Australia, being fitted with a pair of glasses at a free clinic could change their life forever.
So when you stumble on that old pair of glasses, pop them in your bag and next time you pass an OPSM store, drop them in at the counter. Such a simple act will change someone’s life. Click here for more information.
2. Dress for Success: Put the clothes you no longer wear to work
Today you can start to help another woman get her life back on track. And all you have to do is go through your wardrobe. Easy peasy.
Dress For Success provides a free, specialised dressing, grooming and interview skills program for long-term unemployed women. They give the gift of economic independence to disadvantaged women by providing them with professional work clothes, a network of support and the career development tools to help them thrive in work and life.
So why not go through your wardrobe to see if you have any work clothes you can donate? Dress For Success welcomes all good quality secondhand work clothing including work-appropriate shoes, handbags and unused lipsticks for women of all ages.
You can find the Dress for Success Brisbane office here, the Melbourne office here and the Sydney office here. If you live outside of these areas, the Salvation Army will always gladly receive work attire for their clients. Call 13 SALVOS or click here for more information.
3. Sign up to Givit
Your piano is staring at you. Or maybe it’s your old mower. A printer. Guitar. Gardening tools. Whatever it is, it’s taking up space in your house, unused and unwanted but … you can’t bring yourself to just throw it out. Right? Well, baby have we got the answer for you.
This innovative website was set up last year by Brisbane woman Juliette Wright. It’s like a national matchmaking service for donated items. Charities get in touch with Juliette to tell them what they need and Juliette lists the items on her site in the hope that some good person will respond.
So go online and register to receive the weekly Givit list. There’s usually a long list of items that are needed from computers to desks to freezers to gardening equipment to running shoes. One week you’ll read that Juliette is looking for a filing cabinet and – hello? – you happen to have a filing cabinet taking up space in your garage. Talk about a perfect match.
Visit www.givit.org.au and sign up for the weekly newsletter.
4. Put those hotel shampoos to use …
Forget the blue bubble snow dome of Rome and the classic “I got wrecked on Great Keppel” stubby holder. When it comes to holiday souvenirs Lucy appears to have the world’s largest collection of complimentary hotel shampoo bottles. The stupid thing is she says she rarely uses them. They tend to sit in her toiletries bag ready for when she goes away … to another hotel where she can pilfer more shampoo and bath gel bottles. (Don’t judge her. Too late?)
This week we discovered the perfect way to put her addiction to good use. Homeless shelters. Homeless shelters are always desperate for the bare essentials – shampoo, soaps, toothbrushes, deodorants. That kind of thing. And I’ve been told those little hotel shampoo bottles are the perfect donation item. So that’s where Lucy’s stash is going from now on. Homeless shelters and emergency accommodation are provided by a range of organisations across the country including St Vincent de Paul, Mission Australia and Spiritus.
Have you got any other suggestions about small ways you can make a difference?
Top Comments
So, I have a TONNE of magazines, which I have sitting in boxes as my idea was to donate them!
Then I wasn't sure where to donate them to, so they are still in boxes!
I didn't want to just lob up at a hospital & say 'I have these, will you take them off my hands'....
Anyone have ideas?
PS In WA
Kinders or child care centres for art? If the pictures would be appropriate, of course!
Hi Bel
Ring a hospital and ask them ... I BET they will want them!! Otherwise, sometimes local primary schools and high schools love having them for their art projects (to cut up). Again just call your nearest school and ask at the office. I've done that before and they've grabbed them.
Hi Bel
Before a recent house move I listed a pile of books on GIVIT's "Virtual Warehouse". { You'll see GIVIT is included in this MamaMia feature }
I was pretty sure an assisted-accommodation facility or similar would snap them up, and they did!
All I had to do was drop them off at the office of the social service which needed them. A few weeks later they emailed us to say how much the recipients were enjoying their mini-library.
You might like to pop over here and see how easy it is to donate things.
http://www.givit.org.au/don...
I love that GIVIT affirms the dignity and worth of people in need, by asking that we donate as-new, quality items.
It's a wonderful service, entirely free, and it taps into our innately generous spirits. As it's entirely online, anyone can donate, anywhere.
Another great organisation in Sydney is Magic Moments - who run the Basket Brigade every Christmas with hampers for the homeless, elderly, needy families etc. I have loved helping out with the packing of the hampers and they also have a great program called Grandies Gift Giving which I have also participated in. You are assigned a wish list of an elderly person living in care (who often have no family of their own) and need simple items like clothing and toiletry items. Simple to just add a few items to your grocery shopping to cover their requests. More info: http://www.magicmoments.org...