Prof wrote:You are stretched thin, personally and financially. Could you transfer some of the pantry work to a third party? I worry that you may wear yourself out with the second, charitable job, get burned out, etc. Would it not be better to try to find someone to share the load on the pantry now?
I have two other board of directors who are there to help run things. One putts around and does whatever (mostly hiding food he wants to one day claim as a discard so he can try to take it home) and the other promises to do things, only half does them, claims it's finished, and then wonders why I'm out straight finishing her job. They're supposed to run the stock room and the volunteers so I can catch up to the monumental administrative work and program the POS system (to cut back on the admin so I can help them more), but I spend a lot of time helping them out and fixing volunteer mess-ups. After the busy season was over, the volunteers pretty much deserted, so we're down to two or three steady ones. One is 80 years old and can't mentally handle much more than marking out UPC codes and folding clothes in the clothing room. Another cannot read or write, so there isn't a whole lot he can do. The third is, I think, a little touched in the head because she almost never stops laughing, but she can operate the inventory gun and her handwriting is legible. Each person can only put in one or two hours one or twice a week.
Prof wrote:Warning: Free advice is worth about what you pay for it -- so just look at this as an expression of concern and sympathy, and, if nothing else, admiration for your commitment to the pantry.
Thank you.
mutter wrote:But why are you in that situation? Thats a rhetorical question so you do some introspection. If youre not where you want to be then do something to change it. In the mean time what can I do to help?
Look, already I know its my fault I'm in this mess, so there's no introspection necessary. Dropped out of high school due to medical problems, unable to afford college or qualify for scholarship or student loans, trying to financially assist my grandparents when they can't afford their pills, rescuing four ferrets who would have otherwise been put to sleep, taking on a food pantry that supports five towns - which everyone else was going to let close, etc. This situation is just the culmination of those actions. It's what happens when you stretch everything too thin and people still want more. You're out of your mind if you think it's a good idea to help someone like me.
When chosen for jury duty, tell the judge "fortune cookie says guilty" - A fortune cookie