Three Girls, an RV, and a Dream

Have you ever wondered how you can make a difference with a simple random act of kindness?  Have you felt that no one will notice or that your small step isn’t big enough for this often kindness deficient world?

Three young women with big hearts and an even bigger dream challenged those questions when they embarked on a nine-week road trip around the United States in an RV.  Natalie Vartanian, Sally Hope and Kathryn Lejeune make up Girls Gone Moto, a web TV show and pursuit of happiness project.

Vartanian and Hope, both certified life coaches, have a vision of fulfilling their lives and the lives around them.  Lejeune is the artistic soul who joined them on the journey, filming their weakest and most intimate moments.

Kathryn Lejeune, Natalie Vartanian, Sally Hope and Coach the Dog - Credit: GGM

These three women traveled together with a simple mission: to inspire people to pursue happiness, dream, and take action.

This heartwarming journey was inspired by a five-week RV trip that Hope and Vartanian took together around the western United States.

“It was during that first RV trip where Girls Gone Moto was born,” Vartanian said.  “We saw how inspired people were from hearing our story and dreaming of doing something like that for themselves.”

Prior to the trip, the girls raised about $7,000 through a fundraising campaign.  These funds covered expenses like gas, lodging fees for the RV and supplies that supported their volunteering efforts.  Vartanian said she was overwhelmed by the support of the community that reached out to their mission.

Their journey lead them from their homes in Southern California to the North Carolina coast.  In Episode 4, the girls danced on the Atlantic Ocean shore and celebrated a victory so sweet I could almost feel the wind in my hair and the sand between my toes.

Their ultimate goal for the journey was to film a pilot web TV series and pitch the material to networks.  Their desire to join the thousands in television was not to gain fame or to fill their pockets, but to contribute in a positive way in which they inspire people to follow their dreams and give back to their communities.

The random acts of kindness took little effort but received huge results.  A few of these simple gestures included, leaving notes on people’s windshields, paying someone’s toll, putting money in expired meters, donating books and crayons to a hospital, picking up trash and leaving a purchased snack in a vending machine for the next person.

Sally Hope ready to deliver an air-filled bouquet of love to postal workers in Englewood, CO - Credit: GGM

Many of the thoughtful gestures could have a chain of results for the recipient, such as leaving a sympathy card and a free month of coaching for a recent widow or handing someone the last $20 they need to feed their family.  Large or small, this kind of behavior offers the recipient an amazing and unexpected gift, one they can not only reflect on, but also give to someone else in return.

“Generally, people responded with disbelief,” Vatanian said.  “That was a real wake up call for us, that random acts of kindness are so rare in our society that people question your motives when you are simply trying to do something nice for them; it was kind of sad to see that.”

This reality only led the girls to feeling a greater importance to give and have people pay it forward to create a ripple effect in our world.

Vartanian said her favorite random act of kindness was giving a man gas money at a station in Utah.  They later received an email from the man’s daughter, expressing her gratitude for their compassion.  This small attempt to reach out to him truly made his day.

But, these road angels didn’t stop at random acts of kindness.  They volunteered with a variety of organizations, including various animal shelters, homeless shelters and after school programs for children.

Natalie Vartanian making friends at Brother Wolf Animal Rescue in Asheville, NC - Credit: GGM

Unfortunately, the trip wasn’t entirely smooth sailing.  The RV they rented from a friend caused a plethora of trouble that none of them had expected.  The vehicle they dubbed “Bess” put up quite a fight, giving her first punch 36 hours into their trip.  The troubles ranged from flat tires to dead batteries to water leaks.  Overall, they put about $2,000 into an RV that didn’t belong to them.  Ouch.

Their cost of gas was outrageous and inspired me to never grumble at the pump again.  They spent about $3,000 on gas in nine weeks.  They drove 7,300 miles and got about eight miles to the gallon.  That’s an average of about $0.41 a mile.

These kinds of setbacks could discourage anyone.  I can easily picture myself flooding the RV with dismay and tears.

“There were several moments when we felt discouraged and wanted to turn the RV around and go home,” Vartanian said.  “We had so many mechanical issues come up that first day and a half that we wanted to just throw in the towel.”

They overcame those hurdles by remembering the vision and why it was important to them, she said. They started seeing how those bumps in the road were small in comparison to the big picture of the journey.

The girls tackled students at University of Texas-Austin for a moment of instant friendship and silliness - Credit: GGM

Despite all the obstacles they had to overcome, all three girls agreed it was an incredible, life changing, challenging whirlwind of a first season of Girls Gone Moto.

The girls agreed their greatest lessons learned were patience and learning how to go with the flow.  They rarely had an idea of what the next week would entail, which led them on a truly unforgettable adventure.

During Episode 6, Hope expressed her gratitude toward the lessons she had embraced throughout the trip.

“I felt really grateful that we are able to go around to different states and meet different people and hear all their stories,” she said.  “Everyone has a unique story, and it’s so incredible to hear them.”

So what’s next for Girls Gone Moto?  Vartanian says their current plan is to focus on pitching their concept to networks.  Since driving an R.V. isn’t very cost efficient, the girls may decide to head to Coast Rica and turn Girls Gone Moto into a global effort.

You can follow Girls Gone Moto via email, Facebook or Twitter!

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A Man I Never Knew

It’s was 7:45 a.m.  I woke to Andy poking me, gesturing that it was time to go.  I peeled myself off the couch and headed out the door, en route to the airport to rent a car.

“I have to make a stop at a job site in St. Paul to hook up a water line; it should only take a minute,” he said.

We arrived at a moderate looking home in Lowertown, just north of the Mississippi River.  Andy gave me a little backstory on the home prior to our arrival so I was eager to poke around the lot, as this was not their average house demolition.

After a little nosing around, neighbors and workers helped me paint a picture in my head of what happened on that quiet street, however, there are bits and pieces of the story that I still do not completely understand.  The story consisted of an elderly diabetic man, a crazy woman and a hoarding problem that was clearly long overdue for City intervention.

The man originally lived in the house next door (which is currently being cared for by the Minnesota Historical Society) when he let the woman move in with him.  The woman, who had an extreme hoarding problem, filled the man’s home to the brim with garbage and possessions alike.  When the home became unlivable, he bought the home next door (the home being demolished).

Just like the neighboring home, the woman once again filled it with anything she could get her hands on.  From what I learned from the neighbors, the man attempted to kick the woman out on multiple occasions.  Somehow she always found her way back in.  One way or another, this man became a vulnerable victim to both this woman’s hoarding and her alleged drug problems.

Andy and his workers spent the last week cleaning out the home; nothing remained on the main floor but an eerie feeling and a stench as repugnant as a corpse.  I stopped in the middle of the entryway as my eyes scanned the empty rooms around me.  I followed Andy around the home as he helped me visualize the condition the home was in just one week ago.

“You had to crawl up a pile of garbage to get through this doorway, with only about a foot of space between the ceiling and the pile,” he said.

We moved into what was the man’s bedroom.

“The pile was at lease five feet tall in here, his bed perched on top of it all.  He had an a-frame ladder that led to the top of his bed,” he continued.  “This is where they found his body.”

His words lingered as I felt an unexplainable feeling rush over my body, leaving me chilled inside and out.

We moved to the back of the house as I questioned the structure.  I am familiar with the process of house demolition and wondered why they would tear down the structures inside the home prior to the demolition.

“We didn’t, Mar, this is just what the house looked like.  This home is unlivable, which is why it was condemned after the body was recovered,” he explained.

This was the kitchen sink. A clear sign of how unhealthy this home was.

We continued through the house as he pointed out the back stairway to the basement.  I didn’t see a staircase.  What I saw was a pile of junk in a hole.  The basement was so packed with garbage, that what I saw was the trickle of it up the stairs.

The basement stairs.

We made our way back to the front of the home and carefully climbed the stairs, dodging newspapers, plastic bags and empty cans.  I stopped in my tracks when I reached the top of the stairs.  I was too shocked to move.  Not only was the stench now powerful enough for me to be gagging, but the sight had changed as well.

Andy began to grumble that the workers had not finished hauling the garbage out.  I nodded in agreement as I climbed around knee-deep piles of garbage.

Note the window frames, this is what the majority of the walls and window frames looked like

Andy threw me a pair of gloves, hinting for me to ease my shock and make myself useful.  I began to shovel through the pile of rubbish as my eyes scanned the items I was scooping up, newspapers dating back to 2001, unopened 1996 calendars, sealed mail, empty tomato soup cans, clothing, and change.  Lots of change.  Andy claimed over $300 in loose change and a single $100 bill throughout the week that he cleaned that house.  I left with a mere $3.75.

I took a break from shoveling and began to poke around the contents of the top floor of the home.  I moved slowly, attempting to take in every single item around me.  The house slowly started to transform right before my eyes.  What started as a repulsive living environment had turned into a giant cry for help.  The garbage disappeared, the stench removed, all I saw were small, broken glimpses of hope.

A hanging note, dated 1996, told a different story in its entirety

What thoughts possessed this man?  Why was he so weak to the woman who controlled his life and his home?  Why did these little “things” need to adorn his broken home?

Inspirational/quirky refrigerator art

A simple collage, a cry for help for a better life

I can't help but wonder what it was that he wanted out of life

According to the Hartford Hospital, compulsive hoarding affects up to 2 million people in the United States and is most commonly found in conjunction with other diseases, such as Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and dementia.  Most people who hoard are detached from family, their disease eventually leading them to homelessness.  In this special, and extreme case of hoarding, the hoarder was removed from the home, leaving the man to suffer alone.

Shortly after we had the remaining garbage removed from the home we went outside to begin the demolition.  I helped Andy hook up the water line and closely looked on as Chris began to remove the house, one crunch at a time.  We laughed as neighbors and passer-bys gathered and exited their cars to take pictures and videos.  I laughed, but I was just as amused the first time I saw it.

Andy and I finally left the job site after spending nearly three hours in that home.  We met a friend for lunch at Lucky’s in Mendota, soaking up the warmth and releasing the shock and uncontrollable sadness that was simmering inside of me.  I had started to center my mind when Andy told me we needed to go back to the job site.  I felt a sink in my stomach, the day’s memories flashing in my mind.  I felt like I had grieved through a confusing situation and felt a notable fear knowing I had to return to it.

We pulled up to the lot; a lonely, single staircase was all that remained.

Symbolism at its best

I stood in silence for what felt like an eternity, staring at the concrete stairs.  These old, cracked stairs are all that remained from that man’s home, and his life.  No one succeeded him, few knew his name, no wills were drawn, no adornments of his life will decorate his loved one’s home in remembrance of him.  None of these things, only a set of cold, concrete stairs that will soon be gone as well.

I somberly stood in wonder.  Wondering what his favorite color was, what he wanted to be when he grew up, if he was a cat person or a dog person, and why he never had the strength to stand up and fight for his life and his home.  I began to pull myself out of my mental frenzy, hopped in the car and pulled away, the concrete stairs slowly shrinking in my rear view mirror.

This was two days ago.  I have carried on with my week, meeting with friends and enjoying the rest of my vacation, but I can’t shake the feeling, underneath my skin and deep within my heart, that something bad happened.  I have yet to figure out exactly what it is that I wanted to take away from this experience.  There is the obvious: the fact that this disease affected this man in an unfair way, the reality that there are so many people in this world that are living in dismay, and the truth that everyone has a story, regardless of whether or not they tell the story, or if they have anyone to tell it to.  There is something more, a bigger lesson that I can’t seem to grasp, and possibly never will.

All I have here is a simple, yet heartfelt tribute to a man I never knew and scarring visuals that are now haunting my sleep.  I’m not sure that I could have moved forward, without these words, knowing that there wasn’t a soul out there that is remembering him today.  I may not know anything more about this man than what I learned from him in his home, but I can peacefully carry on knowing that something was done.  I guess that’s all any of us can really hope for, that something was done.

Little Bunches of Love

Guadalupe with Barack Obama

I have wanted to return to Meaghan’s classroom since my first visit on their 100th Day Celebration.  I love working with kids, they make me smile as if I had slept with a hanger in my mouth.  I left home at 10am and made the 50 minute drive to Fenton Avenue Charter School in Lakeview Terrace.

I signed in at the office and waited for Meaghan to come meet me.  The kids had just been released for lunch so Meaghan and I headed to the cafeteria for her break.  I stood inside the cafeteria, laughing that school cafeteria pizza has not changed.  It’s still that same soft, rectangular pizza I ate at Lake Elmo Elementary when I was a child.  Meaghan ordered herself Orange Chicken off the staff menu before we headed to the faculty lounge for lunch.  I smiled on the inside, thinking of how mysterious the faculty lounge was to me when I was a child.  We always thought that something really grand was going on in there.  Grand, no.  Simply a group of staff eating lunch discussing their lesson plans.

The staff bell rang and we headed to the recess area to meet the kids.  We greeted the class, lined them up and returned to the room.  They slowly settled themselves into their seats before Meaghan handed out a math test.  After they all completed their tests we handed out materials for an art project.  The kids were given a dozen pieces of shaped construction paper.  After a series of simple folds and cuts, the finished project would look like Barack Obama.

We got about halfway through the art project when another teacher poked her head in to see if we wanted to join her class in checking out the book fair.  We lined up again and headed to the Primary Center to view the books for sale.  I always loved the book fair when I was little and as I walked around with the kids, I made a list in my head of what books I would have purchased.

We walked back to the classroom, finished our Obama pictures and began to clean up our mess.  Shortly after clean-up started, the fire alarm went off.  The kids lined up in a mild panic as Meaghan grabbed the fire extinguisher, a vest, a sign and a package filled with the kid’s emergency cards.  I was shocked by all that she had to do in a fire drill.  Not only because my memory of a fire drill was simply lining up and going out the playground, but because the kids were already in such a panic, how would they react should there really be a fire?  We sat outside thinking it was a fire drill until a fire truck roared around the corner, stopping in front of the school.  It was a guess that someone had pulled the fire alarm and the kids went wild with excitement when two firefighters  stepped into the recess area.  They waved like true heroes and all the kids waved back.  It was pretty darn cute.

When all the madness was over we headed back the classroom and started watching Despicable Me, as the day was almost over.  I sat staring at the kids, a little saddened that this was the last time I was going to see them.  I looked at the little 7-year-old girl in front of me and wondered where she would be in 20 years.  Would I recognize her if I saw her walking down the street?  Where will she go in life and what will she do?  I shifted my eyes to Meaghan as she began cleaning and organizing her classroom.  I admire teachers.  They work so much harder than anyone gives them credit for.  They possess more patience than all those people in this world that judge their jobs as easy.  They shape the futures that I sit here wondering about today.

100th Day Celebration!

Meaghan is a first grade teacher at Fenton Avenue Charter School in Lakewood Terrace, California.  When we arrived at her house on Thursday she asked us if we wanted to come to her classroom on Friday for their 100th day of school.  Fenton runs on a year round track schedule so she works two months then has a month off.  I was ecstatic that she made the offer and couldn’t wait to volunteer with the little tikes.

Tamera and I left her house around 1:30 and made the 20 minute drive to her school.  We arrived in the office, checked in and waited for one of her students to come walk us to the classroom.  When we arrived Ms. Moore (no longer Meaghan once we entered the room!) introduced us as Ms. Mary and Ms. Tamera.  They all stared at us in wonder and excitement, itching for their 2:00 party to start.

A girl in the back of the classroom slowly raised her hand.  “Uh, Ms. Moore.  They kind of look the same, sort of.”

Meaghan laughed and Tamera and I turned to each other to find the resemblance.  Curly hair and dark glasses are about the only features that tie her and I together.  Nonetheless, it gave us a good laugh.

100 hands painting project

When we arrived, the kids were just finishing up a writing project on what they would buy with $100.  It’s always amusing to hear what comes out of a six-year olds mouth.  Their wishes ranged from a Nintendo DS to a horse that would make their sister cry.   After they were done writing I took one child at a time to participate in the 100 hands painting project.  Each child immersed their little hand in bright red paint, giggling every time.  They each made five handprints on the giant banner before they moved on to the next project.  It was funny how some kids came over and just plopped their hand down in five quick motions, while others were very particular and concerned about how their handprints were going to look.  I kept telling them that each print was cool and unique because it was theirs but they still needed to make sure the thumb was completely showing or that there were no smudges.
Fruit Loop Necklaces & 100th Day Crowns!

After they were done with the painting they headed over to Tamera’s table where they made Fruit Loop necklaces.  They were given a long piece of yarn and a large pile of Fruit Loops to create their party necklace.  Ms. Moore’s instructions were to do ten of each color until you reach 100.  The kids started great but after a while we noticed that they were switching colors or creating some sort of pattern.  Ms. Moore walked around the room for the next 20 minutes correcting all the kids. “Ten, switch colors.  Ten, switch colors.”  She was like a broken record and it grew more comical every time she said it.

When all the projects were complete we all cleaned up our mess and the kids packed their bags to go home.  They all stood next to their desks and Ms. Moore passed out “Caught Being Good” tickets.  Once the bell rang we all lined up and brought them to the gate where they met their parents.  We returned to Meaghan’s room (kids are gone, so is Ms. Moore) and helped her organize for her lesson on Monday.
As we left her school Tamera and I shared our favorite stories of our afternoon.  I had a great time volunteering in Meaghan’s classroom, I love working with kids and watching their little minds tick.  Later Meaghan informed me that I could be a regular volunteer at Fenton.  Hopefully I will get lucky enough to have a work schedule out here that will allow me time to get involved in the community.  While there is a need for people to help all around the world, even in small town Minnesota, it is fresh and in your face how much need there is in LA.  Which is why it is so important for everyone to do something.  Regardless of how trivial it may seem, everyone makes a difference.
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