• birthday cake

    The ultimate gift

    Several very kind and generous people have been messaging me about what I want for my birthday/Yule/Xmas. Since so many of you are far away, I went ahead and created a wishlist on Amazon. However, if you’d rather support a cause I hold dear, then please sign up to be an organ donor.

    Currently, more than 120,000 Americans are waiting list candidates for organ transplants. A new name is added to the national organ transplant waiting list every 10 minutes. And every day, 18 of those people die because a match was unavailable.

    It’s so easy to become a donor. Simply fill out a card or check the box on your driver’s license application. Then tell your family and friends about your decision. That way, if anything ever happens to you, they’ll know to sign the consent form and honor your wishes. Having this discussion with your loved ones also offers you the opportunity to encourage them to learn more about organ donation.

    Age isn’t a factor. Neither is gender or race. Organs and tissue can be donated by anyone who decides to help others. You don’t have to have a physical exam to see if your organs are good enough to donate. Medical suitability is determined at the time of death.

    If you ever become seriously injured or ill, the doctors will give you the best care available. The decision to donate your organs has no effect on the amount or quality of medical care you’ll receive. Your life is the first priority. But if don’t pull through, the hospital can use your forethought and generosity to save other people’s lives.

    What can be donated? You decide. Personally, I signed up for the whole shebang. When I’m gone, the United Network for Organ Sharing can have my heart, kidneys, pancreas, lungs, liver, intestines, eyes, skin and bone marrow. It’s not like I’ll be able to use them.

    Once those organs are harvested, strict federal guidelines will ensure ethical and equitable distribution. Patients in the immediate area who are critically ill will get first dibs. If no suitable match is found, the organs will be offered regionally, then nationally.

    Organ donation is free. Almost all major religions in the United States consider it an acceptable medical practice. And it’s one of the few opportunities for anyone to achieve a sort of immortality. Yet millions of people still haven’t filled out an organ donation card.

    Hopefully, that will change today.

    Donate LIfe

    –Photo by Zsuzsanna Kilian. Used with permission.

  • birthday cake

    “A happy birthday is measured not in the amount of gifts one gets, but in the amount one is loved.” ―Todd Stocker

    With my birthday, Yule and Christmas coming up, I’ve been receiving emails and messages asking me what I want. I am quite fortunate; my needs are few. So, as always, I request that you consider becoming an organ donor.

    If you who have already checked that box at the DMV, thank you so very much. Someday, hopefully very far in the future, you will become a hero. In that case, a card would be lovely. My address is available here (just click on the contact info link).

    And for the generous souls who prefer to send presents, I have created a wish list. It reveals far more about me than any essay I could ever pen.

    (Photo by Zsuzsanna Kilian.)

  • Shop, share and smile

    charityWhile many nonprofit organizations do amazing work, they can always use additional funding to continue their efforts. Even charities staffed entirely by volunteers have overhead costs — administration, rent, supplies, promotion — and every little bit helps these groups support a cause or assist those in need.

    What is your favorite charity? I tend to gravitate toward nonprofits that support animal welfare, arts and culture, education, the environment, health and human resources and organ donation. In addition to giving money, time or supplies on a bi-weekly basis, I also participate in the AmazonSmile program. Here’s how it works:

    1. Sign up for Smile here.

    2. Select your favorite charitable organization.

    3. The next time you want to purchase something on Amazon, skip the www address and instead type in smile.amazon.com. As you shop, you’ll find the exact same prices and selection offered on the www version of the site; however, shopping through Smile means that Amazon will donate 0.5% of the purchase price to your favorite nonprofit.

    You can change your charity listing at any time, and there are nearly 1 million eligible 501(c)(3) public charitable organizations to choose from. So far, I’ve made donations to VPR, NHPR and the Monadnock Region Humane Society.

    If you don’t know what organizations to support, check out Charity Navigator, a website that evaluates America’s largest charities. Listings contain plenty of background data as well as full contact and financial information. Best of all, Charity Navigator maintains a donor advisories list to warn philanthropists away from less-than scrupulous organizations.