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Showing posts with label Volunteering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Volunteering. Show all posts

【58】A Mega Circle @ North Hills, Millvale, Camp Guyasuta, Pittsburgh

Life can be a gigantic rush. From one point to another, it is so very easy to be pushed around by all responsibilities. Many many years ago, I encountered a book titled Slow Down, Life Is Elsewhere, don’t remember much of the content nowadays anymore, but still occasionally got struck by the name, especially when my life seems to be in a rush and I am at the edge of burning out.  

Slow down, lie is elsewhere. I interpreted as to be open and consciously be susceptible to distractions that are good for your heart.  

Since May this year, two major projects at work made me very much intense all the time. Then here came two big corporate volunteering service events co-managed by Pittsburgh Cares. One is Deloitte’s IMPACT Day, the other is American Eagle’s Service Day. I happily joined Pittsburgh Cares’ staff team to assist the two events, representing Pittsburgh Cares in various projects while also doing some volunteering work myself.

With Deloitte, we claimed a small town minutes outside downtown Pittsburgh called Millvale and did all kinds of projects from weeding community garden, moving art boards of a mural, to painting, and cleaning, to beautify the community. With American Eagle, many projects were organized around the city, but I was with the sub-group that worked on camp improvement at Camp Guyasuta.
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Through services, not only our mind got relaxed, but also our body became very active and healthy. When not being pressured by responsibilities that are immediately related to our livelihood, people tend to be happier. Volunteering is a great example of pursuit of happiness in such a fashion.

Another type of distraction that is good for our heart is friendship. Sending out a birthday card, talking on the phone occasionally, having a dinner together after work, or just stopping by for a visit and catch up on life’s developments.  Few days ago, I did exactly all of them, which eased my stress level and recharged my mental horsepower.

One visit to a friend’s place in North Hills was especially a treat. From some online materials summarizing uniqueness of Pittsburgh, I learned that Pittsburgh is very Hilly. Watched an episode on WQED called “Dirty Dozen” showcasing an annual bicycle event and got a sense of hilly Pittsburgh. But driving from Lawrenceville to North Hills was the first time I actually experienced this side of Pittsburgh and how hilly it really is. Nevertheless, it was a fun drive only if I hadn’t encountered so many people beeping their horns to each other. Drivers in North Hills seem to be less patient to others as if if the car in the front fails to start immediately after lights turning green, their cars will fall off the hill. So in order to not fall,  they got to beep the horn, make a fuss and be in a hurry.  

While we were having dinner at an Indian Restaurant, I even bumped into the teaching assistant of Evaluation class that I loved very much during my CMU years. This is just very interesting. Pittsburgh is really a small place, you just may not be able to avoid the fact that you can almost bump into familiar faces wherever you go! After the dinner, we chatted a little bit and reminisced the past and our friendship, then I took off and headed back home in Leechburg.

The GPS took me again through those hilly roads. After many ups and downs and turns, I seemed entered a familiar place. Then I saw a building with a mural.  That particular mural told me the place was called Millvale and I was looking at the mural Deloitte folks helped to move during the IMPACT day. It was then and there that I felt life is a Mega circle.  No matter how rushed we might be, how many ups, downs, and turns we might take, at some point of this journey, we would witness our own work from the distance. Even only it means being part of it, it can be interesting and sweet. After all, life is a mega circle and we are all part of something. Just like, I have considered myself part of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh part of my journey, my journey part of the world, the world part of the planet, and the planet part of the universe, the universe part of time and space, and time and space part of eternity.
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When thinking this way, I feel small, humbled, able to slow down and relax, yet still have a drive to be grand.

Beer winning trivia @ North Hills, Millvale, Camp Guyasuta
1. North Hills is a term generally used to collectively describe the northern suburbs of Pittsburgh. It includes 38 independent suburban municipalities, and 12 school districts.

2. February 13, 1868. With the help of schoolteacher M.B. Lyon, Millvale Borough is incorporated from parts of Shaler Township and Duquesne Borough and named after its industry and location—mill and valley. With a population of 668 in 1870, it quickly expanded after the Civil War and prospered upon connection with Lawrenceville via Ewalt Covered Bridge and a narrow gauge railroad that would become part of Pittsburgh’s famous trolley system. By the turn of 20th century, Millvale had annexed the Third Ward from the Shaler Township and had three schools, three breweries, an opera house, a grocery store, a candy store, and a Masonic lodge.
During the depression in 1930s, Millvale took advantage of the government initiated Works Progress Administration to fortify Girty’s Run Creek and assisted the war efforts proudly with through both its manufacturing businesses and its residents. Many businesses still seen today come from this era, including Daniels’s Electric, Esther’s Hobby Shop, Haser Trucking, Grant Bar, Lincoln Pharmacy, Vecenie’s Beer Distributor and Jerry Kitman’s Fine Furniture.

Though Millvale underwent a fantastic boom after the war, expanding the police force and fire department we know, America’s energy crisis and the downfall of both the manufacturing and steel industries hit home. As Millvale Centennial came and went, the number of residents began dwindling down to the few but fiercely proud of Millvale.
Millvale’s streets were redone and a riverfront park that gave residents access to Allegheny River and featured a pavilion, a bike trail, a boat launch and a skate-park. With development of the riverfront for recreation as well as business, Millvale surpasses similar peers in its county. Although Girty’s Run left parts flooded in fall of 2004, the community survived and grew closer and continues to strive on to a prosperous future today.

3. Named after a great Seneca warrior, Camp Guyasuta is operated by the Greater Pittsburgh Council of the Boy Scouts of America. The warrior Guyasuta probably served as a scout for young George Washington in 1753, though he played a role in defeating the Braddock Expedition in 1755, and sided with the French in the French and Indian War. Guyasuta was a major player in Pontiac Rebellion—indeed, some historians once referred to that war as the Pontiac-Guyasuta War.
At the outset of the American Revolutionary War, the American revolutionaries attempted to win Guyasuta to their cause but he sided with the British. After the war, the aging Guyasuta worked to establish peaceful relations with the new United States. In Pittsburgh, he is honored, along with George Washington, in a large public sculpture called "Point of View", which overlooks Point State Park.

ID@ Deloitte, American Eagle
Where is American Eagle’s headquarter located in Pittsburgh?
Where is Deloitte founded? and Where is its Global headquarter?

【32】Plant flowers with Pittsburgh Park Conservancy @ Parkview Ave & Blvd of the Allies, Oakland

How many times did you pass by a beautiful garden, benefit from the relaxation and good spirits it bring to you, and wonder about the people and efforts behind the creation of such beauty?


Honestly speaking,  I never did until I participated in creating the beauty in my neighborhood once with Pittsburgh Conservatory, +GlobalPittsburgh, and other +Americorp VISTA  volunteers on May 11, 2013.



We were planting flowers, pulling out the weeds, and watering the garden to make sure they would grow and bloom beautifully for the summer. It’s a fun labor work, because I knew I was part of something beautiful. During those chatters, I met a lady (in blue coat and jeans) who had been volunteering for many years in the neighborhood. She works in Oakland and would come out during lunch time to pull weeds and maintain gardens. She told me she had always loved working in the field being close to the earth since she was a child. Pulling weeds is her way of relaxing and meditating. She said, “It’s very therapeutic to me. I enjoy doing it, so I have been doing it for many years.”


Ever since the volunteer experience, I see more in those gardens I pass by everyday than what I did before. It’s very humbling. I am humbled.


Beer winning trivia @ Parkview Ave & Blvd of the Allies


1. The first part of the Boulevard of the Allies was dedicated on August 8, 1921, and the entire highway opened to traffic on October 2, 1923. One of the first interconnected traffic signal systems was installed a month later (November 13) on the Boulevard downtown as an experiment. Prior to completion, its cost was reported as $1.6 million per mile, the most expensive road in the world at the time. The Boulevard at Grant Street was once home to Pittsburgh's Chinatown until the 1950s.  The road is named in honor of the Allies of World War I. The Boulevard of the Allies was rededicated on June 29, 2008 as part of the celebration of Pittsburgh's 250th anniversary.


The road begins in Downtown Pittsburgh at its intersection with Commonwealth Place and an off ramp from Interstate 279. The road continues east through Downtown passing Point Park University and the Art Institute of Pittsburgh to Grant Street where it becomes elevated to transition from the flat plain of Downtown to the bluff that Oakland sits on. Before reaching Oakland, it passes by Duquesne University and Mercy Hospital along the edge of a cliff several hundred feet above the Mon River with spectacular views of the city's Sou (th) Side neighborhood and includes partial interchanges with Interstate 579 and 376. Upon reaching Oakland, it cuts through the southern portion of the neighborhood and leads into Schenley Park just bypassing the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University. Upon entering the park across the Anderson Bridge, the road's name changes to Panther Hollow Road and continues through the park to become Hobart Street in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood east of Schenley Park.


2. A now defunct Chinatown was located on Grant Street and the Boulevard of the Allies, where two Chinese restaurants remain. The Chinese population in Pittsburgh has grown recently and is now ranked 19th among the large city category with about 3,402 Chinese Americans, or about 1.1% of the population. Although newer stores exist in the Strip District with many other ethnic varieties, the Chinese grocery stores are scattered throughout the Pittsburgh metropolitan area with a presence in both the suburbs and inside the city. I wish a more concentrated Chinatown would be restored in the future!


3. The Pittsburgh Park Conservancy was founded in December 1996 by a group of citizens concerned with the deteriorating conditions of Pittsburgh’s parks. In 1998, the Park Conservancy signed an official public-private partnership with the City of Pittsburgh to work together for the restoration of the city’s four regional parks- Frick, Highland, Riverview, and Schenley. Since then, the Parks Conservancy has raised more than $60 million towards park improvements, and has recently expanded into other city parks as time and resources permit. By the numbers, 1700+acres are stewarded by the Parks Conservancy. In 2013, 1300 trees and shrubs have been planted, 1570 volunteers have been mobilized with 5, 498 volunteer hours contributed and in-kind $ 119,000 donated. (Check previous blog post ②First trip to Pittsburgh during 2009 India Day beer winning trivia #2 for all major parks in Pittsburgh)


Your ID @ Planting flowers in Oakland
How many races or ethnicity can you identify in the above pictures?

⑤Volunteer with Project Sunshine @ Children’s Institute


October 20, 2011. It’s been a little over two month in Pittsburgh. School and everything was set up for proceeding by and large. So I thought it would be the time for volunteering. Joined +Project Sunshine  at Carnegie Mellon University and worked with those kids with special needs on arts & crafts projects in the Pittsburgh Children’s Institute for two hours. It’s a great getaway from intense school work. More so, it’s always enjoyable and inspiring to work with kids, especially those with special needs, for you just can’t help but being patient, nurturing, empathetic, and always looking for positiveness in the kids you work with. These are characteristics we normally don’t show gothing through each and every “serious” day. I also was pleased to find out that those Asian undergraduates at CMU were so willing to serve and being part of the change they envision. Based on rough observation gained in those meetings and the picture shown above, Asian student made up of a decent portion of volunteers in project sunshine project.


Beer winning trivia @ Project Sunshine, Children’s Institute

1. Project Sunshine is a national organization based in New York City. Project Sunshine
empowers a dynamic and dedicated corps of over 15,000 volunteers to bring programming -
recreational (arts), educational(tutoring and mentoring) and social service (HIV and nutritional
counseling) - to 100,000 children facing medical challenges and their families in 175 cities
across the United States and in four international locations: Canada, China, Israel and Kenya.
In Pittsburgh, three organizations receive services from Project sunshine chapters: Children’s
Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, Ronald McDonald House Charities of Pittsburgh Family House,
and The Children's Institute.

2. Children’s Institute was founded in 1902 by Mary Irwin Laughlin. U.S. Senator Bob Casey, Jr.
has helped secure funding for the Children's Institute of Pittsburgh. This funding has contributed
to the creation of an autism center and pediatric unit, which treat children with Autism Spectrum
Disorders. In 2010, the contributions also secured the purchase of research equipment for the
study of environmental triggers of autism, to further the development of autism treatment.

3. Project STAR at Children’s Institute of Pittsburgh is a program places children in adoption,
foster care, or respite care situations depending on the child's particular needs. The goal is to
match a child with an appropriate resource family anywhere from a few days to on a permanent
basis. Resource families are trained by the institution and are continuously assisted by the
institution if necessary. A man or woman 21 years of age or older is qualified to become a
resource family. Project STAR does not discriminate in terms of marital status, number of other
children, economic status, employment, or home ownership.


Your ID @ Children’s Institute of Pittsburgh

Where is (are) Children’s Institute of Pittsburgh located?