Together

I'm here in Zambia, safe and sound, and although things are quite different here, so much feels so comforting. Yesterday I walked the same Zambezi Rd. to the Ng'ombe compound that I have for the past couple of years to the same house that I went to last year. It's incredible to see Clothed in Hope becoming a reality, faster and more cohesively than we ever imagined. Yesterday I just spent time reconnecting with Elina and with a shout and a smile, I knew we were together again, and it felt so great. Miles and cultures may stand in the way of us most times, but in the end we're all the same and the beauty of friendship is universal.

Today, I had the sheer joy of sitting in Elina's living room surrounded by the most beautiful people I have ever met in my life. The CiH women were together again. They've been so excited for things to start, and what a blessing it is to get to tell them that they are, right now. We shared ideas, we exchanged thoughts and suggestions. This isn't my project or my nonprofit, it's their community initiative to see change brought about to the Ng'ombe compound through their skills training program. Giving them the responsibility and decision-making ability didn't deliver burdens but rather brought freedom.

In the meeting, I asked when they'd like to start and how often, thinking it may be a day here and there for the next 3 months of my stay. But oh was I wrong. The women all spoke in their native language of Nyanja together, and cohesively said "Monday!" and agreed that they want to meet every single weekday to learn business and trade skills to make product for income generation and empowerment that's contagious in that community.

So here we go. Monday at 14Hours, 2pm Zambian time, we're beginning this. Our first lesson is hand stitching and we have a bunch of surprises lined up for y'all. {re}styled is bigger than we ever imagined. And I absolutely cannot wait to show you the first photos of the first product created by these wonderful women.

Thank you for creating this opportunity for empowerment, employment, and sustainable development in Ng'ombe. I wish I could bring each one of you  here to share in these joys, but this will have to do for now.

With great love, Amy

ps. Internet is patchy so I'll try to keep you updated as things happen, but just you know, we're all together, and it's happening.

The Runway

The time is finally here. Months, years of planning, so many people involved with and supporting the cause, fundraisers completed, and after tomorrow, it all changes. The dream and the vision become reality. After the long wait in the airport, possibly with delays and complications, there's a unique feeling when you're finally sitting in your seat on the airplane rolling down the runway. Like ripples of exhaustion from preparation and dealing with the seemingly less-important details. Like eager anticipation for takeoff. Nervousness even. Excitement and adventure. You're seated and there's nothing else you can do. Bags are stowed, seat backs and tray tables up, you know the whole deal. You can't even be distracted by your electronics at this point. It's just you, your adventure ahead, and the acknowledgment that there's something so much greater than you wrapped up in all of this. You're not the pilot, you're a passenger. You're surrounded by tons of people all sharing a similar drive, but all going different places.

That's where I'm at. Today I'm on the runway, ready for takeoff tomorrow morning at 6am. I invite you to get yourself a ticket, and hope to look around over the next 3 months and see you all seated around me with the common drive of seeing change brought about through Clothed in Hope. Follow CiH on Rally, Instagram, Twitter, anything really so that you can be a part of what's going on. Email me your ideas and suggestions. Share through these sites. Attend our fundraisers. Thank our stateside staff for being amazing.

And lastly, join me. I cannot wait to share with you what's up ahead!

With Love, Amy

It's happening

One month from today I'll be in Zambia, and all of this planning, blogging, tweeting, fundraising, etc. will take on a completely new meaning. It's happening. The in-country operations are beginning SO SOON, and I couldn't be more excited to share in this next step with y'all. I look forward to being reunited with Elina and her family, along with the other women I met last summer.

I look forward to teaching the first ever personal finance, disease prevention, and skills training seminars in the heart of the Ng'ombe slum compound.

I look forward to hearing more of their stories, learning about their lives.

I look forward to loving.

I look forward to schedules & plans being second to relationships & friendships.

I look forward to being a part of what will happen in these women's lives through CiH.

And I look forward to bringing you with me.

If you haven't read it already, definitely check out Pack Your Bags to learn more of how you can join in this journey. Packing is underway, plans are being solidified (as much as possible), and it's all really hitting me that it's really happening. And my heart is filled with joy. Join us. You won't regret it.

With Love, Amy

Pack your bags...

Dear friends, As I’m preparing for my trip to Zambia this July, I’ve come to realize and be at peace with the fact that so much is unknown. Out of my control. And that’s normal for that culture, but I’m so excited to see what’s in store for Clothed in Hope, what’s ahead for the lives of the women we care so deeply for. As I begin to get things ready, making appointments, working out the details that I can try to figure out here, I do it with an understanding that this isn’t just my trip.  This Clothed in Hope in-country launch isn’t just my journey. This is an adventure we’re all about to go on, with supporters, donors, graphic designers, video editors, staff, interns, with every contribution of every person who has allowed their hearts to be impacted by the stories of the women in Zambia, to bring hope and see change in the Ng’ombe slum community. I’m so thankful for every single person who is a part of this organization, and would love to invite everyone to come with me to Lusaka, Zambia this trip without even leaving your homes.  And stating the obvious, yes, of course we need funds to continue to grow, but we also cherish our CiH community, our heart. This isn’t the end, or even the beginning of CiH, it’s just another step on an incredible journey. I can’t say for sure what’s ahead. But I can say that I am grateful to get to share every step with every single one of y’all.

So join me on July 24.  Stretch a bit out of your comfort zone for those twelve weeks, allowing your heart to be impacted by the stories shared, experiences blogged about, photos taken, and I promise you won’t regret it. I need y’all, and am blessed by every one of you, whether I’ve met you or not, because you are the ones making it happen.

Practically you may be asking, “Really, what can I DO?” And sometimes it’s awkward asking for help, but it’s necessary. So here are just a few great ways:

  1. Tell everyone you know about this trip. Keep yourself updated with blog posts and such, and let the stories of the women, of Zambia, be heard here in America. Share CiH with your neighbors, communities, friends and family and invite them on this journey with us.
  2. Give. This may sound like a no-brainer, but the more financial resources we have, the more we can do in Zambia with our programming. Maybe you’ve been waiting to give until things start happening, so now’s your chance. The ticket is booked and it’s all absolutely going to happen. Maybe you’ve felt like your contribution wouldn’t be enough. But this is the beauty of it, everyone does what they can, big or small, all making Clothed in Hope what it can be for the women and children of Zambia.
  3. We need your talents. Creative types, marketing gurus, business-minded folks, anyone and everyone, we need y’all to help us keep things running in the US, to keep spreading the word and to help us keep up with our growth. We also need those specializing in finance, disease prevention or public health, education, and life skills to submit mini-lessons to be taught as a part of our skills training program in Zambia this July. Jump in my suitcase with the informational packet you’ve created knowing that YOU will provide valuable educational seminars as a part of the CiH program. That would just be incredible. If you would like to contribute your passion to a greater cause, email me through the Contact form on the website.

Mark your calendars. July 24 we’re all boarding the plane, the 36-hour travel time to Zambia to begin this next chapter of this organization. Don’t miss the flight.

With Love, Amy

Amplify HOPE benefit concert recap

One week ago at this time of the night, Joey Hyde, Steve Moakler and Brinley Addington were entertaining a crowd at Tin Roof in the Vista in Columbia, SC. With the event in the works since January, it was an incredible feeling to have so much support by not only the USC student body and faculty, but also the Columbia community coming out to the event. Amplify HOPE was an amazing night of raising awareness and over $1,600 towards the launch of the skills training program early this upcoming fall. Thank you to everyone who made this night such a huge success- our interns, volunteers, USC departments and faculty promoting it in their classes, WUSC radio, sponsors, and countless others. We would love to extend a HUGE thank you to Joey Hyde, Steve Moakler and Brinley Addington, along with their band, for coming down to Columbia to play an amazing show benefitting women thousands of miles away. Help us show our gratitude by checking out their music on iTunes, "liking" them on Facebook, and following them on Twitter. Feel free to check out their websites to see when they'll be playing in a city near you if you weren't able to make it out to Amplify HOPE. It's incredible to see what's possible when we come together for the benefit of others. Let's not make this a one-event thing, but let it be the way we live our lives.

If you weren't able to make it or if you want to re-live the fun night, check out our Facebook album.

With Love, Amy

Looking back to look ahead

On Tuesday, we’ll be celebrating exactly one year of being an official 501(c)(3) charitable organization. But before then, let’s just pause a second to take a look back over the past year. Just one year that has opened eyes and hearts to Clothed in Hope. The organization has spread past me and my efforts, placing the responsibility to do something in the hands of so many others. I have been humbled to be a part of this past year, meeting peers passionate about the cause, parents, businessmen, graphic artists, video editors, just about anyone and everyone who has said “I want to do more” with their talents. Clothed in Hope isn’t just a cause, it’s a movement. It’s a network of people who have rejected the notion that life is meant to be lived alone. It’s a contagious heart that sees the needs of Zambia and chooses to do whatever it can to help.  Sure I’ve put in countless hours for CiH but more than anything, it’s given to me. It’s shown me the beauty of humanity- that we’re all the same and when we come together, anything can happen. That it’s a joy to walk by faith. It’s shown me that people love to give. Maybe it’s not always in the form of monetary donations, but it’s shared Facebook statuses, Twitter mentions, t-shirt sales, invitations to speaking engagements, time, and most beautifully, passions. During 2011, I had the honor of watching everything progress. With every news release, every press coverage of Clothed in Hope, I became more and more hopeful for the future of CiH in the lives of Zambian women. But this past summer, it all came alive. After my journey down the red dirt path hand-in-hand with Elina’s sweet children, both her own and the ones who she’s generously given a home to, I arrived in this house in the middle of the slum community, Ng’ombe, in a cinderblock house seated on a secondhand couch. Doors were open with an afternoon (winter) breeze blowing through. The sun poured in through the barred windows and the light curtains that tried to keep bugs from sneaking in. As chickens ran through the living room with echoes of children’s laughter filling the other rooms, it all became real.

Surrounding me were 5 Zambian women, 4 of them complete strangers to me. They wore their nicest blouses and sat attentively as Elina translated our first meeting together. I’ve been told that it’s going to take years to earn the trust of these women but after sitting with them for just a couple of hours, I’m not so sure I agree with that completely. These women, timid, gracious, humble, hurting yet enduring, full of faith and hope, shared with me, a young American stranger, the hardships of their lives, the oppression of their culture and the hopes they have for the future. I was invited into their lives. I was offered words of encouragement. I was asked questions about my own upbringing. And humbling won’t even begin to describe the feelings I felt that one afternoon. Sitting with these 5 other women hearing about the deep hurts in their hearts and the struggles they face, I realized something.  We are all exactly the same. Sure we’re raised in different environments, with different socioeconomic classifications and whatnot, but we all have fears, doubts, insecurities. But we also all have dreams, hopes, joys, aspirations, laughter, smiles, and love to give.

I could have planned as much as I wanted, and I could’ve typed emails until my fingers fell off, but until I sat there and everything became real, none of it would have mattered. It was in those moments that I was able to see the true heart of Clothed in Hope, one that loves to give and loves to love. One that sacrifices. One that sees a sister, mother, aunt, daughter hurting and must do something to help her. One that notices that life is so much more than what is in front of us. One that sees hope in the little things. One that just busted at the seam that day in June.

When I walked out of that room, saying my see you later’s instead of goodbye’s, I knew that I would walk away changed. Those women have more to offer us than we think we can give to them. And those women are so eager to see life in a different way through Clothed in Hope than they’ve been forced to experience throughout their entire lives. It was my absolute joy to get to know these women, my friends, who told me, “When you leave to come here next year, tell your friends you’re coming home. We will be your family now.” And it is my absolute joy to let you share in this journey to give back to the women who have given everything for their children and who have been told by their culture that they are worthless, meaningless, inhuman. This road isn’t easy; it’s going to be a long one, but I invite you to see that it will absolutely be worth it, every step of the way.

With Love, Amy

Will you join us?

This semester I have been just overwhelmed with the incredible support here at the University of South Carolina, with students, with teachers, with Columbia residents. I thought I would have to go into these few months working tirelessly to spread the word of hope and opportunity with Clothed in Hope, but the help has been so humbling. It's amazing to see a community come together with one thing in common: a passion for helping others through Clothed in Hope. Whether through over 20 awareness campaigns and a huge sum of contributions from the HRSM 301 Professional Development class with Professor Smiling, or the chance to debut the {re}styled clothing line at the RETL 388 fashion show to generate another substantial sum of donations from the event, I have just been amazed. The word is spreading, the organization is growing, but it doesn't stop there. We need YOU. You can change a life through supporting Clothed in Hope for long-term development. This holiday season, we hope that you'll consider giving a gift that keeps on giving. Will you join us?

Click to watch our newest promotional video!

Love, Amy

{re}styled

Clothed in Hope is happy to announce the new product line to be manufactured in Zambia and launched worldwide in 2012! The secondhand clothing market dominates the fashion industry in Zambia, with very few alternatives. Zambians pride themselves on physical appearance despite the lack of funds to purchase new brand name clothing. We are excited to be able to support the secondhand clothing industry through recycling t-shirts into {re}styled garments. Get style, give hope. Through the future purchases of {re}styled clothing, Zambian women, similarly to the product, will be able to re-create their lives into something beautiful, something treasured and valued. Each Zambian producer will have a {re}styled product named after her and will sign her name on that product's tag. Your purchase ignites the change. We give the shirt new life, you give the Zambian woman and her children new life.

Featured is the first {re}styled sample. Stay tuned for many to come.

It's official!

We sent our paperwork into the IRS just two short months ago, and today we received back a few pieces of paper- pieces of paper we've been anxiously waiting for, both in anticipation of the best and preparation for the worst. We're happy to say we've received the best! As of February 21, 2011 Clothed in Hope is a 501(c)(3) Tax-Exempt Organization. We're so very excited to have received this news so soon after our paperwork was submitted and are looking forward to a successful year of preparation for the big move in June 2012. More to come soon about the trip to Zambia that took place a couple weeks back. The vision has been refined, goals are set in place, and the June 2012 timeline is reality approaching quickly. You don't have to wait until June 2012 to become part of the change. Change happens now. Change happens with your help. You have the ability to change the lives of incredible women living in devastating poverty. Will you join us in this cause?

Home

May 14, 2011 It's been a while since I've updated and so much has happened! I've been able to establish connections with many different people with such different backgrounds but all with the same heart of wanting to help out. It's been incredible to witness and be a part of already. As y'all are my main support system, I wanted to update you with some exciting news! I found out a couple weeks back that I'll be going to Lusaka, Zambia for a week this summer!! My time there will be invaluable as I'll be able to accomplish many things that are just impossible to do stateside. I've already lined up appointments and meetings with various people just to learn as much as I possibly can while I'm there. This trip "home" will serve as a vision trip to get a better idea of short-term and long-term goals that are achievable for the culture and people there. I'll be taking lots of photos and even video so be looking forward to seeing some updated material on the website in August. I can't wait to be able to share these women's hearts with you through letting them tell their own stories for you to hear and read about. This trip is such a blessing and will be such a great time for Clothed in Hope to prepare for two semesters of fundraising and awareness-raising in order to make the big launch next May. Thank you for taking part in this journey and I look forward to updating you as things progress along the way.

With Love,

Amy

So Blessed

March 2, 2011 Things have been taking off like crazy ever since the site was launched. As of February 21, 2011 Clothed in Hope is officially a registered nonprofit corporation with the state of North Carolina. In just a week, I've been blown away by the overwhelmingly encouraging reception of Clothed in Hope and the support of everyone around me.  People have stepped into my life willing to help in any way possible because they too feel the need to support and promote the cause of Clothed in Hope. I've received a crazy amount of LOVE Africa t-shirt orders both on Etsy and locally, and that's been a fun way of connecting with new friends who are so passionate to be a part of the change for these Zambian women's lives.

The most exciting thing (maybe even so far) happened just today! Clothed in Hope was featured on the front page of USC's student newspaper, the Daily Gamecock. Click here to view the article. This was printed and distributed across campus in addition to the features online allowing friends to share via Facebook, email, and other social media outlets. I have really been blessed with the most encouraging friends ever, and with amazing opportunities to watch Clothed in Hope grow by the minute. I can't wait to see what's in store for the upcoming weeks, months, and even years for Clothed in Hope as it stretches beyond USC to change lives of women forever. Thank you for stepping into this organization and for taking part in this change. Your support makes Clothed in Hope what it is today and provides for what it will be tomorrow.

With Love,

Amy

Welcome!

February 22, 2011 Thanks for visiting the brand new website for Clothed in Hope! Please bear with us as the website is continually being updated. Feel free to look around, read more about the cause, and even contact me with any questions or comments. If you know of anyone who can help, anyone who wants to donate, or just any way we can expand more, I'd love to know. Thank you for following along in this incredible journey. I can't wait to see what it has in store not only for me, but for the lives of the precious widows in Zambia.

Keep checking back for more info and fun links. For now, please spread the word and check out the merchandise for sale on my Etsy account. Thank you for your support and have a blessed day!

With Love,

Amy

P.S. Enjoy the song! It's one that's been on repeat ever since I came back from Zambia last summer.