Showing posts with label COVID-19. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COVID-19. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

UPDATE #15: IT'S DONE!!!! Sometimes our own need help. This is family.

Photo copyright Aji, 2021; all rights reserved.

UPDATE 15:  Third update today, and this is the last one.  WE DID IT!!!  Thank you, thank you, to everyone who donated, shared, boosted, or otherwise supported this effort.  [Now she just has to build up her inventory and figure out all the ins and outs of launching her business, LOL.]  Seriously, thank you all so much, from Lee and her family, and from Wings and me.

YUP!  WE ONLY NEED TO RAISE ANOTHER $67!  SO CLOSE NOW!

$293 raised just since this went up late last night!  As of today, and a very big donation from a dear friend, we are at $838 $988 $1,848 STILL $1,973 $2,273 $2,373 $2,423 $4,423 raised just since two Thursdays ago! Thank you, everybody; thanks to your generosity, Lee was able to order her son's laptop. That leaves $4,707 $4,162 $4,012 $3,152 $2,727 $2,627 $2,577 with only $577 left to raise to cover LeeAndrea's own laptop and other equipment and Internet service so she can work from home while schooling her son, so please continue to share, and give if you can. Ideally, I'd like to raise another $700 $600 today, so that she can order M's laptop; school's been in session for two weeks already, and we don't want him to fall behind for lack of necessary technology. This is the harder part, raising the funds so Lee can transition to running her own business online, but it has to happen. She was injured recently at work, and she can't keep doing this. Please help us get her the tools to continue working from home and keep her family well and safe. We should have been able to raise another $1,000 over the long weekend, but progress has stalled entirely. Can we make it happen this week? I'll bump this to the top every day with an update.

It's been a brutal year and a half here. Sometimes our own need help.

At the moment, it's an Indigenous family very close to us who needs our help: our niece, Lee Andrea Trujillo, and her husband and sons. [For those of you who remember Roy, Lee is his youngest daughter; if you remember Ona, who walked on last May, this is his sister.] We're trying to help her raise $5,000 for her youngest son's educational needs and her own work. It will cover four pieces of necessary equipment and all the associated costs that go with them: two laptops, a digital camera, and a replacement for Lee's broken cell phone. [Hence the image above; the relevance of the earrings will become clear shortly.]

If we had the kind of money that would allow us just to give her everything she needs? We'd do it in a heartbeat. Unfortunately, we don't have it, either. So I promised her I'd do my best to raise it, so that she and her family have what they need this coming school year (which is already in session here). We need to raise enough to 

If you want to donate without scrolling through all the details, you can do that here, via PayPal:  leebtru [at] yahoo [dot] com. Don't forget to check the "friends and family" box so that she doesn't lose part of your donation to fees.

Now, the backstory: 

Lee's youngest son, M, is too young to be vaccinated (like us, the rest of her family got their vaccinations long ago). He also has asthma, and common colds are dangerous enough for him as it is. COVID-19? No chance. She's homeschooling him now because it's the only way to keep him safe. That's one more layer of labor, and it makes it harder to work outside the home. More immediately, M's small tablet won't handle all the complexities of his school assignments and interactions; for that he needs a full-scale computer, one with the usual bells and whistles that will make Zoom and other things workable. They can't afford to buy him one.

Lee Andrea has consulted the hardware and software requirements, and has found one via Amazon that will do the job well, and leave M with room to grow, so to speak, as a student. You can see the model here; it's a small [in size] MacBook with enough memory, hard drive space, and speed for M to be able to do all the work he needs in the years to come. That retails for $1,349, but that's before insurance, sales tax, shipping, and whatever other cabling and apps he may need. By the time all that's added on, you can figure well over $1,500.

But that's not all she needs now.

Lee Andrea and her family are like us: They've always worked, and worked hard. But it's hard enough for Indigenous people at the best of times, and these are nowhere near the best. But in addition to losing her brother last year to West Nile (a tragedy that was extremely costly for the whole family), we've had a year and a half of uncontrolled deadly pandemic. Work is hard to come by. Among the other things she does to help support her family, Lee cleans people's houses, and that's heavy labor, hard on her body under any circumstances. Now, with COVID-19 and far, far too many people refusing to get vaccinated or wear masks or distance, any of the most minimal things that are part of being a decent human and decent member of society? It's downright dangerous. [We have both a state-wide and a local mask mandate here, and a trip to the dentist today showed us that most people are ignoring it. Meanwhile, state-wide, there are already at least 50 people on a waitlist for an ICU bed, any ICU bed in a hospital anywhere. We're averaging 700-1,000 new reported cases state-wide per day again, and that's only the reported ones; the real number is much higher.]

Anyway, this shows you what it's like trying to work here in any kind of public-facing capacity. And Lee's at the point where her body no longer needs the physical punishment of that kind of labor anyway. But she has another option, IF we can get her the equipment she needs to make a go of it.

Lee Andrea is a brilliant beadwork artist. The four pairs in the photo above? Are all by her. Those are part of my own collection; in fact, I wore the white/turquoise pair on the left when we went to the dentist today. Her work is very tight, very clean, beautifully stitched, with wonderful gradients and contrasts — and it always, always gets compliments. Now, what if she had the chance to work from home, build inventory, and sell her work online? How much better and safer would that be for everybody?

So. I've promised to help walk her through the logistics of setting up a site, photographing her work and writing descriptions for it, and promoting it online. But she can't do that without the proper equipment. So that's the purpose of the second laptop [same model as M's], one that will devoted exclusively to her work and to building her own online business. [And with that, we're already up to well over $3K.]

But in addition to the laptop, she needs a digital camera. She's found one she's comfortable with, here. A little over $200 for the camera, but again . . . extended warranty, sales tax, shipping, etc. on top of that. And then there's the broken cell phone, out of warranty, can't be repaired, and she needs a decent one to be able to stay in touch with her husband and sons and the rest of the family, and potentially to be able to adapt it for use with her work. The replacement model? More than $700 just for that. Sales tax and so forth, round up to near $800, and suddenly we're already at $4K.

But there are always eventualities no one can predict. I personally have no idea how much insurance on the two laptops and the warranty for the camera will run, but she needs that layer of protection. I do know it won't be cheap. I also don't know how well her current Internet set-up will work, either for her work or for M's school needs, so that may require an upgrade. And the this is only the second week of school here; M may well wind up needing to buy additional software/apps throughout the year for various subjects. And so I've suggested she set her goal at $5K, so that if we've forgotten something, or something entirely new but essential crops up, it's covered.

It's a modest goal, one that should be easily reachable if we work at it. We're in for the first $100 right now. If 50 people match us, she's covered. If 100 people can give $50 each, it's covered. This is family; please help us help our own cover school and work needs now, when local resources are so scarce.  Here's that PayPal address again:  leebtru [at] yahoo [dot] com. And even if you can't donate, please share the link, because the more eyes on it, the quicker we can fund it and get their family's school and work needs met.


As I said, this is family. Wings and I will take any help for them as a personal favor. Thanks to everyone in advance.


Thursday, December 31, 2020

UPDATED X7: Everyone Needs Warmth and Light Now: Fundraiser for JoanMar

Photo copyright Aji, 2020; all rights reserved.


Folks, we need to jump-start this effort. Donations are coming in slowly but consistently and she's closing in on the $2K mark now, but we still need to help raise $8,258 $8158, and time is short. Please share this post, share JoanMar's PayPal and CashApp addresses, and help us get her there ASAP!

I told you that I would be posting a fundraiser Saturday for someone very dear to us, someone a lot of you reading this know and love. She's been struggling for six months now, alone and in silence, in the middle of this deadly pandemic. 

UPDATE:  We're at $720 in one afternoon up to $953 now! up to $1,344 at $1,490 at $1,589 at $1,742 at $1,842 now!!! That means we have $9,280 $8,656 $8,510 $8,411 $8,258 $8,158 left to raise; not bad for just a few hours one day of getting the word out. Please keep sharing, and please keep donating!  WE CAN DO THIS!

BUT FIRST, the links:  PayPal address is nevfai [at] optonline [dot] net; CashApp is $ForYouMaria.

Most of you know this woman as JoanMar. She's JoanMarDK on Twitter, and JoanMar at the Great Orange Satan. We know her as a dear friend, a spirit sister of sorts. She is strong, brave, beautiful Black woman with a heart filled with love and a warrior's spirit, and she needs us now.

I said "strong," and there's no lie there, but frankly, she's been stronger than anyone should ever have to be. Some years back, she lost her daughter, a beautiful young woman, to a terrible example of medical malpractice. She's the one who's always there when someone in her extended family needs something: the one everyone goes to when the need money, or a hand, or a shoulder. But the same is not returned to her.

I said elsewhere this morning that Black and Indigenous woman know this burden well: We keep everyone else alive and safe and well, as well as possible and better than anyone could reasonably expect in this terrible colonial system. But we're so good at it, so skilled, so silent about our sacrifices and what it costs us that everyone has just come to expect it as the nature of things. And when we are the ones who need that help?

There's usually no one to be found.

None of us should have to be so "strong."

And JoanMar has been struggling to make ends meet for herself, as well as for everybody else, in the middle of this deadly pandemic where there's no work and no income and no help to be had, where too many this week are again being forced out onto the streets in the middle of this danger, and the more ordinary dangers of winter. And she's one of the "lucky" ones: Her landlords are a couple who understand well what she's up against, and who are not going to evict her. But she owes three months' back rent, she owes arrearages on utilities and every conceivable bill and expense, because that's what happens when there's nothing coming in even as the whole world continues to suck you dry. It's going to take a good $10,000 to cover everything she owes, and that may sound like a lot to you, but she lives in a place where this is very ordinary for cost of living — for 3 to 6 months? It's actually low. She also lives in a place where winter is both already here and also already cold and deep, and everyone needs warmth and light now.

Everyone also needs not to be alone, struggling through what's left of this god-awful year with no one to help shoulder the load. JoanMar hasn't had that; she's been doing it all by herself.

No more. Now that we know, it's our job to do something about it.

The breakdown is more or less as follows: About one-third of the $10K is three months' worth of back rent. The remaining two-thirds are a mix of state and local taxes still due (and federal taxes are coming up again in a few months), plus utilities like electricity, heat, water, probably garbage/recycling, too. Then there's vehicle insurance, maintenance, gas in the tank. And, of course, food, toiletries, cleaning supplies, other essentials. These are all sort of off-the-cuff calculations; we just threw this together last night and this morning. I can tell you that if it errs, it will be in being too conservative. I want her to have some breathing room.  A room with a safety net in it.

Look, we all know how terrible this year has been for everybody, us included. Sales are way down; we're struggling, too. But we're blessed: We have a roof over our heads, wood for the fire, food in the cabinets and the fridge; our power is on, and we have good clean water. With such good fortune, how could we NOT help? We have to. This is a friend, someone we love.

So we're giving $100 today, via PayPal. [Yeah, but I can juggle a few things; if we have to take a late-fee hit on the electricity bill, it's worth it.] Will you match it? If you can't, will you donate whatever you can spare? And if you're comfortably situated, will you donate more than that, to help get her $10K and beyond as fast as possible?

Because this is supposed to be the season of peace, and there's been precious little of it anywhere. JoanMar needs warmth and light, and the peace that comes with knowing she can cover the bills the pandemic has turned into insurmountable obstacles. So let's do this. I'll update as I have info. First hundred now:




Here's that donation info again:  PayPal address is nevfai [at] optonline [dot] net; CashApp is $ForYouMaria.

And Wings and I would consider this a personal favor.

Thanks.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Wings and Aji, 2020; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.