Giving Back this Holiday Season: Operation Gratitude
This article may contain affiliate links; if you click on a shopping link and make a purchase I may receive a commission. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
As a co-leader of my daughter’s Girl Scout Daisy troop, we wanted to find a way for them to actively participate in charities and volunteer activities. At age 5 and 6 and only having 60 minutes for a meeting, this proved more difficult than you may think. We were excited to learn about Operation Gratitude and it has now become a tradition every Memorial Day weekend to have the Scouts make cards for those serving our country overseas.
Each year, Operation Gratitude sends over 200,000 care packages filled with food, entertainment, hygiene, and handmade items, plus personal letters of appreciation to veterans, first responders, new military recruits, wounded heroes, their caregivers, and to individually named U.S. service members deployed overseas and their families waiting at home. Operation Gratitude’s mission is to lift the spirits and meet the evolving needs of the military and first responder communities, and provide volunteer opportunities for civilians anywhere in America to express their appreciation to all who serve our nation. Since its inception in 2003, Operation Gratitude volunteers have shipped more than 1,700,000 care packages.
When our Girl Scouts were very young, we gave them paper, crayons, and on the board wrote phrases and words for them to choose to write on their cards. They weren’t personalized, but they were full of personality and Operation Gratitude let us know they received them and that they were delivered. It was a great way to teach the girls about the military, their purpose, and their service. As the girls get older, the cards can get more specific, more creative, and more plentiful. Operation Gratitude has multiple card and letter writing programs, and your thank yous can also be sent to veterans, new recruits, and first responders.
“Nearly 10% of Americans served in the Second World War. Back then, you very likely had a co-worker, a son, a neighbor who was serving in the war effort. In Vietnam, far fewer served. 2% of the population. Today, only about half a percent of our population has served in Iraq and Afghanistan, experiencing something that's mostly invisible to the rest of us.”
That really hit me. Sure, we’re making blockbuster Oscar-winning movies about the war and using plenty of service men and women in commercials this time of year to tug at the heartstrings, but in general, the current military situation is so remote to so many of us, it’s not on our radar. But these men and women are sacrificing their lives, their mental health, their family relationships to serve us and our country. Whether or not you agree what the government is choosing to do with your military is separate from respecting and honoring those who are out there on the frontlines and seeing every day that which is a blip on the news. To send them a little love, a little recognition, a bit of thanks especially at this time of year is pretty important. Let them know they aren’t invisible to us.
Did you like what you just read?
Consider tapping here to buy me a coffee in thanks. The best gift you can give a content creator is the gift of sharing. Consider sharing this article on
Facebook
or Pinterest.
Thank you so much for your support!
Healthcare wasn’t something I thought about; it was something I took for granted. My father worked for the government, so growing up we had great insurance. When I went to college, the ACA and its policy to have young adults covered by parental policies didn’t exist so I was kicked off my parent’s healthcare. I got health…
I’m home from Rehoboth Beach, and even though I slathered on SPF 30 and 50, I’m a sun worshipper and I came back brown. I know it’s not healthy, and it’s not cool with my fellow Gen Xers to be tan these days, but gosh I love it. I rarely drink, I don’t smoke, my…
Weekend Reads for November 8th-9th What women really want: To not answer work emails at 10 p.m. (New York Times – gift link) Olivier Rousteing exits Balmain after 16 years with the brand. (Elle) Supreme Court reinstates the administration’s transgender passport policy. (The Hill) We still call women hysterical – but now we do it through…
A rant about current fashion trends for young women, along with a collection of good reads, good art, good music, good books and TV, and some really good sales.
A few reads and recommendations for the end of the year. Weekend Reads will resume in 2024 and I look forward to connecting with you! And if you have any recommendations on what to watch, read, hear, or see do share in the comments. I think many of us have a bit more time over…
This was a week of Adulting with a capital A. If you follow my Instagram Stories you know last week I was struggling with healthcare. Thanks to the Affordable Healthcare Act (AKA Obamacare), since I no longer work for a company, I am able to get my family insurance through Maryland’s healthcare exchange. Last year…