A diary of an experiment in social entrepreneurship

Archive for April, 2009

Happy Birthday Mama Lucy!

Today, April 8th, is Mama Lucy’s birthday.

In Tanzania, birthdays aren’t quite the production they are here in the US. Maybe there will be a cake baked. Perhaps cards given.

But, if I know Mama Lucy, there will be no pause, no expensive celebration. There will be plenty of joy, the kind she creates every day, hopeful anticipation of the year ahead, and gratitude for the year past. After all, since her last birthday, under her leadership and with your investment, Mama Lucy’s school has become the top school in its district and has nearly tripled in size.

It’s clear that she’s got something to celebrate…and I’m hoping you’ll help. I’m asking you to send your own happy birthday message to Mama Lucy in the comments below or directly on Facebook, and pledge to celebrate your birthday in honor of Mama Lucy and the children of Shepherds Junior school. Here’s how:

  1. Wish Mama Lucy a “Happy Birthday”. Mama Lucy recently joined Facebook!! Follow her here & post a “Happy Birthday” note on Mama Lucy’s wall today to welcome her.
  2. Pledge to celebrate your own birthday in Mama Lucy’s honor. Set up a birthday cause to benefit Epic Change on Facebook. Then, on your birthday this year, instead of gifts, just ask friends and family to contribute an amount equivalent to your age (i.e., 30 years=$30). It’s easy – and it really does feel better to give than to receive! Just:
  3. Become a fan of Epic Change on Facebook.If you’re not already a fan, visit our Facebook fan page, then just click on the “Become a fan” link.

Not a Facebook user? Jot a “happy birthday” note in the comments below and, if you’d like, share the date of your birthday and pledge to celebrate it this year on behalf of Mama Lucy and the children of Shepherds Junior.  Or, become one of nearly 200 million Facebook users then follow the steps above – it’s easy and takes just a couple minutes.

I can imagine no more perfect gift for a woman who gives it all away to celebrate your own birthday in her honor by giving rather than receiving.

And from me, on a personal note…happy birthday, Mama Lucy. I wish I could be there to bake you a cake, give you a hug and sit with you over chai to reflect on what a truly beautiful year you’ve created. I love you, and am so very proud to call you my friend. I hope every birthday wish you make this year comes true…and, as we have this year, together we’ll pour our hearts out in hope and hard work to make sure that they do. Sit today. Rest. Get ready for an even brighter year ahead, and celebrate all that your life has made possible.

In the Name of Love

Reposted with permission from http://www.obsessedwithconformity.com because I wholeheartedly endorse pouring love into the universe.

IStock_000005343680XSmallIf there’s one thing all humans know from the moment we emerge from the womb, it’s that Love is good. It’s as clear and simple at that point in our lives as breathing. As we get older, however, the idea of Love morphs into different things for each of us. For some, Love turns into a lust for power or sex or money or electronics or religion or politics or…you get the picture. But this post isn’t about your personal definition of Love. It’s about the word Love.

When you consider how many songs, poems, paintings, movies, etc. were created with the idea of Love as its core concept, most of us can agree that this one little word has a pretty huge impact on us. On all of us. Across cultures.

So we’re proposing a test. On April 4, 2009 (a Saturday), we all post “I Love You” in our social media circles JUST ONCE to see if this innocuous little sentence can have a positive impact on people – and SM as a whole. No, we’re not asking you to say you Love Social Media, or Facebook, or Twitter or even your mother for that matter. And we’re not asking you to endorse any religion, ethnicity, brand, holiday or any other possible reason you could conjure. We’re just asking you to post “I Love You” once in one of your social media streams.  In Facebook as a status, in Twitter as a post, hell – you can even post it in Linkedin if you want (it’s a Saturday, so no one is going to think any less of you for spreading such a positive message).

Why? Because with all of the shit in the world today we are curious to see whether Love can still conquer all. Especially considering how Social Media is connecting people around the world at the fastest rate in history. Isn’t our universal humanism based in Love? Imagine the result of the combination of SM and Love. Wow.

We do not seek to own this endeavor in any way. So please, take this concept and run with it. After all, you can’t really copyright Love. The only profit we seek is to look into our Social Media stream and see hundreds or thousands of people sharing an emotion that we were all born with – and to remind each other that Love is still the most powerful force on earth.

Among thousands of others, U2 wrote a song about Love for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. It just so happens that April 4 is the anniversary of Dr. King’s assassination. Again, this initiative is not an endorsement of any group, ethnicity or religion. But it’s a damn fine coincidence to spread Love on a day that’s scarred with hate.

Join us. After all, there is no downside. I Love You.

Let's see if 10 characters can change the world. Join the event on Facebook.



Lyrics to ‘Pride (In the Name of Love)’ by U2

One man come in the name of love
One man come and go
One man come, he to justify
One man to overthrow

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love

One man caught on a barbed wire fence
One man he resist
One man washed on an empty beach.
One man betrayed with a kiss

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love

(nobody like you…)

Early morning, April 4
Shot rings out in the Memphis sky
Free at last, they took your life
They could not take your pride

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love…

Crowdsourcing my TED Fellows Application

So, my TED Fellows application is due today…and I’m hoping you can help.  Your feedback and suggestions in the comments or by email to stacey@EpicChange.org or by tweet to @StaceyMonk are much appreciated!  Since it’s due by  the end of the day, the more specific you can be, the better ;)  Most responses were limited to 150 characters, except where noted.  Thanks!

If a friend were to describe your accomplishments in up to three sentences, what would he or she say?

Stacey Monk created Epic Change (http://www.EpicChange.org), an innovative nonprofit that makes interest-free mezzo-loans ($10,000 – $200,000) to grassroots changemakers, then helps them share their “epic” stories of hope in ways that generate income for repayment so that loans may be paid forward to create “change” in communities across the globe. Since launching in September 2007, Epic Change has loaned nearly $70,000 on its pilot project to expand a locally-founded school in Tanzania where, as a direct result, the student population has tripled and the school recently ranked #1 of 117 schools in Arusha on national exams; in just over a year, profitable storytelling efforts have repaid over 15% of the original $35,000 loan disbursed in 12/07. Loan capital has been raised from nearly 1000 donors in large part through savvy application of free social media tools, most notably TweetsGiving, a groundbreaking Twitter fundraising event, which raised over $11,000 in 48 hours.

What other achievements would you like to share?

Our loans have directly funded land, five classrooms and a school bus at a school that serves over 300 children, and have had significant additional impact:

  • Independent Progress: Our investment helped our local partner independently secure (through tuition, etc.) funds for the school’s first flushable toilets, a well that serves the entire village, a kitchen that serves meals each day, a classroom and solar power.
  • Local Autonomy: Our loans have empowered our local partner to bravely walk away from ~$250K in alternate “aid” that required substantive foreign oversight and significant compromises to her board’s vision for their community.
  • Improved Reach: Nearly 100,000 people have visited our site, hundreds of blogs have featured Epic Change, and we’ve begun selling products online and in preliminary retail locations in Tanzania and the US, so the hopeful stories of “Mama Lucy” Kampton, the school’s founder, and her students, have reached thousands.
How do you believe TED can help you accelerate your progress in your field of endeavor? (Limit 350 words)

Epic Change has benefited since its inception from serendipity; we’ve made countless fortunate discoveries by accident (or universal engineering, if you so believe).  For us, simply being in the right place at the right time to meet great people and share fresh ideas has yielded inspiration, connections, resources and attention – the seeds of our early success.

In Africa, I wasn’t searching for a new career; I was travelling – but a chance encounter with “Mama Lucy” Kampton, our Tanzanian partner who dared to change the world by starting a school with money she made selling chickens and eggs, inspired me to create a model that empowers local leaders like her to use their own assets (i.e., their stories) to finance community improvements.

Last May, I was on Twitter after midnight looking only for distraction – but when Sam Lawrence, popular blogger at Go Big Always and outgoing CMO at Jive Software, tweeted he didn’t feel like writing for the following day, I volunteered a guest post that resulted in new donors, volunteers, Twitter followers and coverage in places like ZDNet, TriplePundit and What Gives.

Last November, I wasn’t aiming to create a Twitter fundraiser – I’d just read a touching note of gratitude and wondered what would happen if we all gave thanks publicly, and gave to a common cause in celebration. TweetsGiving was born six days later and, in 48 hours, the site had over 15,000 visitors, raised over $11,000 from over 350 donors, and appeared in over 100 blogs from Mashable to the NonProfit Times.

I wasn’t looking to speak at South by Southwest but Jeff Pulver invited me when our paths crossed as a result of TweetsGiving.

I view TED as an opportunity to swim in a sea of amazing people and great ideas; I can only imagine the serendipity that might be engineered there to help Epic Change in the form of inspiration, next steps, connections, resources and improved awareness of our efforts. I do not have any specific expectations because I know the best possible outcomes from my attendance at TED are those I could not possibly anticipate.

What do we need to know about you that we didn’t ask? (Limit 350 words)

Here’s who I really am – in 10 random (f)acts:

  1. I wish I were a dancer – the kind who move their bodies in ways that are mysteriously beautiful even while conveying desperation or rage.
  2. When I see a dolphin, a butterfly, or two rainbows together, I truly believe my brother Josh is hugging me from a place I can’t see. (Yes, I know how cheesy that is.)
  3. I believe profoundly that I can change the world. And that it’s my responsibility to do so. And yours.
  4. I cry with joy when I hear beautiful music, watch great performances and sometimes even when I dance in a way that makes me feel like this chubby shell might actually be beautiful.
  5. I think the most beautiful protest ever would be if people with candles would line up along the coasts and borders of countries and sing in unison, the same song in different languages. I wonder if that many voices could reach across oceans.
  6. It makes me furious when people insinuate that children in the developing world need or deserve any less than our own children. I once had a friend essentially say that that flushable toilets are an unnecessary luxury for Tanzanian children. She doesn’t know this, but I cried for hours about that email.
  7. I am terrible at household chores. Terrible. Dishes & laundry are not my friends. I also lose my keys, wallet, phone, chargers and other sundry necessities more frequently than should be humanly possible.
  8. I laugh really loudly and often. You’d think that might be obnoxious, but many people have told me they love it.
  9. I was an Air Force brat, and went to 10 different schools between kindergarten & 12th grade.
  10. I know pride is one of the 7 deadly sins and all, but I am intensely proud of what Epic Change has accomplished over the past 18 months. That said, I am acutely aware of mistakes we’ve made, and the fact that we’ve really only just begun…

Can you share a memorable anecdote from your life that will give us a further sense of what makes you tick?

My sister suggested: “share the time in fifth grade when you painted your younger siblings like clowns, and paraded us through the neighborhood on a random summer day singing and collecting change for our ‘entertainment’.” Perhaps this silly story captures me: I am quirky, rarely bored, seldom boring, spunky, entrepreneurial, creative, willing to risk failure and foolishness, resourceful – and I think delivering belly laughter door-to-door is a mighty fine use of spare time.

Absent Ashlee’s recommendation, I may have shared that at the most painful moment of my life – when I lost my brother Josh to an overdose – I was most sad that he couldn’t see that the universe is a profoundly beautiful place, and that hope exists even (maybe especially) in the most unlikely places. What makes me “tick” is shining whatever light I have on the beauty and hope all around us so it simply can’t be overlooked.

If you had help in completing this application, please explain the circumstances, who helped you, and to what degree.

Well, my sister reminded me of that silly clown-faced wandering minstrels story. Then, I posted this application to my blog and asked for feedback from friends and blog readers. I’ve incorporated some, but not all, of their suggestions.

If you have ever been convicted of a crime, please explain the situation below:

Not yet – but if I ever am, it’ll be in an impassioned struggle over something in which I deeply believe.