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  • Well several years ago a very wealthy,

  • beautiful friend of mine was getting married.

  • So I was going to the wedding and I had to buy a wedding gift.

  • But what do you buy for someone who has everything?

  • So instead of buying something that I couldn't afford and they didn't need,

  • instead I sent them a card committing to volunteering 1,000 hours

  • at the Children's Hospital in honor of their marriage.

  • I thought that was pretty cool. I was feeling like a real good person.

  • (Laughter)

  • Looking for a bumper sticker for my Mom's car

  • "My daughter . . ." (Laughter)

  • So I went to the first day of training and one of the very first things we did

  • was we took a tour of the hospital.

  • We went up this elevator to the children's cancer floor

  • and when that elevator door opened and I saw the children

  • those cancer patients, my throat started to hurt

  • and my head hurt, and my heart hurt

  • and I realized that I couldn't do it.

  • I didn't have the emotional capacity to handle it

  • and I couldn't fulfill that commitment.

  • So I flaked and I just left.

  • And then about 3 years later I came home from work

  • and our answering machine was flashing full of messages.

  • Saying that Jacob, the fun vibrant 5 year old son

  • of our dear friends had been diagnosed with a very deadly form of cancer.

  • And he was being admitted to that same children's hospital.

  • So I went back and went up that elevator again

  • but this time when those doors opened what I saw was not a cancer patient

  • I saw a little boy, a little boy that I loved.

  • And I saw a Mom, another Mom, so I sat down and I said

  • "Okay what can I do? How can I help?"

  • "What are you immediate concerns?" And she said

  • "I cannot leave him alone to go through this by himself in the hospital.

  • I have to be here.

  • But if I don't go back to work

  • we will lose our insurance and we won't be able to pay our bills.

  • So I don't know what to do."

  • So I thought and I decided then that I would use the one skill

  • that I learned really, really well in college

  • I threw a party.

  • (Laughter)

  • And everybody came because everybody was look for a way to help

  • but they really didn't know how.

  • So we came together and in one day

  • we raised enough money for her to quit her job

  • and be with him for the entire year of his treatment.

  • But there was a little piece left and that was the payment

  • for the insurance for COBRA.

  • So I called my wealthy, beautiful friend

  • and she and her new husband anonymously wrote a personal check

  • every month to cover that COBRA.

  • That day at that party Jacob's mother stood up

  • and said words that would change my life and the lives of thousands.

  • In front of all of us she said

  • "When Jacob was first diagnosed

  • I remembered someone saying that God never

  • gives you more than you can handle."

  • And I never thought I could believe that again.

  • But what I've learned is you can handle anything

  • if you don't have to handle it alone.

  • I left that party so inspired by what she said

  • and thinking about the other children, the other parents on that floor

  • and what if we were to cast a wider net

  • to support them.

  • What would that look like?

  • So I went to see a nonprofit expert.

  • This was a woman, she had lots of degrees

  • and she had a big business suit with big shoulder pads

  • and she sort of hovered over me

  • and she looked down at me and she said

  • "Honey you could never start a nonprofit

  • the paperwork alone would overwhelm you."

  • Jacob's mother's words, our mission,

  • was stronger than her words.

  • And she didn't understand the passion

  • and the urgency of this cause.

  • And she was wrong!

  • Jacob's Heart has grown to become

  • an award winning nonprofit

  • serving hundreds of families of children with cancer every year.

  • And I've got to to tell you, the medical experts

  • were wrong about Jacob.

  • They gave him a 5% chance of survival

  • and he just graduated from High School last week.

  • (Applause) (Cheering)

  • And by the way, my 1,000 hours

  • they're well accounted for and then some

  • (Laughter)

  • and I've gone on to start two other nonprofits.

  • And I'll tell you, I have fallen in love

  • with the nonprofit sector.

  • Because in spite of our imperfections - and there are many -

  • nonprofits do far more with far less

  • than any corporate social venture or government program can possibly do.

  • For our children. For our grandparents.

  • For ourselves.

  • And each of 1.6 million nonprofits in this country

  • started with a story very similar to the story I just told you.

  • A story that defined a mission and engaged a community's generosity

  • to make a difference.

  • The Children's Hospice and Palliative Care Coalition

  • started because one boy thirteen years old

  • who lived just a couple of blocks from this auditorium

  • died in unnecessary pain

  • after being denied hopsice

  • because of an outdated regulation.

  • So we formed a nonprofit around the mission

  • to speak out on behalf of those too little

  • or those sick to speak for themselves.

  • And we changed that regulaiton.

  • The Boomerang Foundation, our mission is to ignite the power

  • of young people to create a more compassionate world.

  • And it was inspired by a group of High School girls

  • who decided to have a bake sale.

  • Because they cared about other kids

  • and they got all together all their friends.

  • Those girls got together and donated -

  • I am not kidding you - $100,000.

  • To help kids they would never even meet.

  • Nonprofits bring out the best in us.

  • It gives us a place where we can express our generosity

  • and express our compassion.

  • And I really believe in this country, it balances our ethics

  • with our economics.

  • Last year, last fiscal year, individuals,

  • I'm not talking about corporations, or foundations right now,

  • but individual citizens, gave 227 billion dollars

  • and volunteered 8 billion hours in response

  • to things that we care about.

  • That's compassion.

  • To think about how much we can learn.

  • There's so much we can learn from the way

  • grassroots nonprofits in our communities do business.

  • I mean imagine, next time when you wrote your check to the IRS

  • if the Federal Government sent you a thank you card.

  • Thank you for your donation. I can see it.

  • Dear Mrs. Butterworth.

  • Thank you for your contribution.

  • Because of you we're able to achieve the mission of this nation.

  • We are able to establish justice, promote the general welfare

  • provide for the common defense and secure the blessing of liberty.

  • Thank you and at the end of the year we're going to give you a full accounting

  • about how we spent your money so you'll be inspired to give again.

  • (Laughter) (Applause)

  • You know tomorrow if we woke up

  • and we went on our days and all the nonprofits were gone

  • really, our schools, our streets

  • our country, our world woud be less safe.

  • And most importantly

  • the littlest, the sickest and the weakest amoung us

  • might not have a voice and might be left alone.

  • To quote one of my favorite TEDsters Sarah Kay

  • "Indeed there is more hurt here that can be fixed

  • by bandaids and poetry."

  • No matter how far nonprofits stretch our fingers

  • our hands will always be too small to catch

  • all the hurt, injustice, all the pain that we intend to heal.

  • We need you.

  • We the people of the United States

  • in order to really form a more perfect union

  • must unite to fill in the gaps

  • between the fingers of the grassroots

  • nonprofits working in our communities.

  • If we're going to invest anywhere

  • let's invest there.

  • Because it's our mission.

  • It's who we are.

  • And Jacob's mother was right.

  • We can handle anything if we don't have to handle it alone.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

Well several years ago a very wealthy,

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TEDx】TEDxSantaCruz.Lori Butterworth - Sustaining Compassion.非営利の物語 (【TEDx】TEDxSantaCruz: Lori Butterworth - Sustaining Compassion: A Nonprofit Story)

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    Hhart Budha に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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