Jul 27 2010

The Next 5 Months!

Face to Face – Fall Tour 2010 from INVISIBLE CHILDREN on Vimeo.

I am so stoked for this opportunity. It baffles me sometimes that I was chosen to be part of this movement and that I can impact not only students here in America but help create lasting change for students in Uganda. If you would like to partner with me to do that there are a few options on the side-bar to the right. Either through Paypal or through the donation page linked to my account at Invisible Children.

A huge thanks to those who have already helped support me! Donating money is only one way, I need encouragement, prayer, and community as well. Thank you for allowing me to have this opportunity again.


Jul 10 2010

On The Road Again, I Need Your Help!

Hello Friends and Family!

It has been a while since you’ve heard from me. In my last update, I was about to embark on the great adventure that is being a Roadie for Invisible Children.

To sum it up, and not do any justice to the experience, it was life changing and wholly worth every second. My team of four Americans and two Ugandans spent ten weeks in a van traveling across Texas and Louisiana spreading awareness about a conflict affecting millions of people in Eastern Africa. We were able to impact students and adults here in the States, and share ways that they were able to change the lives of students, specifically in northern Uganda.

As the tour came to a close I was asked to return for the Fall Tour and I have decided to say yes and continue this journey that started back in January. I will be a Team Leader for the Pacific Northwest team. We will be traveling through Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and British Columbia. I love this part of the country and am so stoked to be able to traverse and serve in that region.

This internship will be from July 12-December 16ish and, as you can probably guess, I will be volunteering. Gratefully, I will receive a small stipend as this is my second tour but I still need to raise most of my support.

Functioning as a Team Leader, there is much more on my plate this go around and as such, I need your prayers, good thoughts, and encouragement. I’m really looking forward to the added challenges as well as learning to work with my new team.

As I mentioned before, the financial aspect is real and stressful. We all know this; money is never a fun thing to talk about and can add a lot of mental strain, so it would mean the world to me if you would consider partnering with me in this way. I have several different giving options, just to make it as easy as possible:

  1. Buy a Photo: Win win situation, you help support me and I get you a sweet print from one of my travels!! www.tayloradamswift.com (if you need any help ordering off this site, I’m happy to help.)
  2. Tax free Donation through Invisible Children: It’s quick, easy, and a tax write off! The Donation Page
  3. Donate through Paypal: On my blog I have a donation link that accepts either Paypal or credit/debit cards! www.taylorswiftphoto.com/blog

If you decide to support me, THANK YOU! Either way, please keep up with my adventure on my blog!! There it is; the awkward part is over now!

Thank you for taking the time to read this and for keeping up with the craziness that is my life.

Taylor


Jun 23 2010

Laren’s UCSD Commencement Address, worth the read!

From Invisible Children’s Blog:

Laren’s UCSD commencement address

Laren visited Uganda for the first time in 2003 after attending UCSD for one year. The trip changed the course of his entire life and he never finished his degree. That’s why he was more than a little surprised when UCSD asked him to be the keynote speaker at this year’s graduation.

Below is the full text of Laren’s speech to UCSD’s class of 2010. It’s the copy he spoke from, complete with pauses for dramatic effect but without his spur-of-the-moment improvisations.

UCSD Commencement Speech 2010, delivered by Laren Poole:

Happy Birthday.

Today is your birth day.

For your entire life, you have been in a structured and scheduled routine. You worked for grades and rewards- doing what’s safe, and expected.  But today, all that stops. You are reborn and the world is new. It’s time to start living.

You know, it’s funny to me that I am in front of you right now- for a lot of reasons, but, mostly because I’m only 26, and because 7 years ago, I dropped out of this school. Yes, I’m a college dropout. I’m not sure what they want me to say here today- but, when I dropped out -at 19, I thought I knew everything, and clearly- I still kinda think that, or else I wouldn’t have accepted the invitation to speak.

You probably think you know everything too- and if you don’t know it, you’ll google it- on your 4G phone in your pocket and find it. And this is normal to us. We have never really known a world without instant access. We grew up wired to each other; connected, like never before, and this has made the world very small to us. And- the fact that that’s normal is what’s different about us. We are at the beginning of a history in which we all can participate more than has ever been the case in the past, where we can all be responsible for what happens next. Not a clash of civilizations, but acts of individuals. Choose your own adventure. Ordinary people, helping other people, to the best of their abilities because it’s not about where, but more importantly when you were born.

Being alive right now makes us different because we can see the faces of injustice clearer than anyone before us. It’s personal because we are friends with, or at least- Facebook friends with- other young people from around the world. I’m serious. (holding up Jacob’s Facebook profile on phone) This is Jacob. He likes soccer, and lady gaga, and every night, for his entire life, he has been afraid for his life. And whether or not Fox News reports it, we know it. Because we read his status updates.

7 years ago, when I was an engineering major at UCSD, life guarding to pay the bills, and making surf videos on the side, my friend Jason invited me to go on a trip with him to Africa, and it ruined my life. Ruined in the best possible way. I say ruined because everything I was taught to want and to need became infinitely smaller and less significant when I met that 12 year old Ugandan boy named Jacob. He was running for his life because he had escaped a rebel army that was abducting children to fight as its soldiers, forcing them to murder and maim their own family, tribe and friends. When we first went to Northern Uganda in 2003, the world had not yet seen or heard of this war- even though it had been going on for more than 17 years. Meeting, and then really knowing Jacob, and becoming his friend, this war became personal, and we promised him we would end that war. I believe we have done every single thing we were told possible, and almost every single thing we were told impossible to keep our promise to Jacob- from sleeping inside the rebels camp to pushing for the signing of a peace treaty… to meeting with President Obama in the Oval Office to discuss ending this war… but we aren’t done yet. Because right now, today, thousands of kids are still being abducted, murdered and forced to murder by one madman at the center of a child army. But, Invisible Children’s fight is not just about stopping this man and his rebels, or ending one war….well, it is… but it is also about all of us asking ourselves: is my life more valuable than theirs?

Here’s what Hitler did right: he created a universally known example of wrong.  He forced the world to make a decision about justice, because it was not possible to be neutral on the issue. Through his diabolical cruelty, he unified the world in defense of inherent human rights for all. Justice by means of community. And I believe that right now, because we are so connected, we are global citizens. Which means our patriotism does not end at our country’s or even our continent’s borders. And because I believe we are ALL entitled to basic human rights, we are responsible for ensuring them for one another. You might be thinking: aren’t there laws in place to keep such a thing from happening again? And the answer appears to be: yes. The members of the United Nations signed the ‘Responsibility to Protect’ act, which mandates the international community to intervene in the most severe human rights abuses, when the local government is unable or unwilling to stop it; BUT… it is failing to follow its self-commissioning. They strategize, and they discuss, but they do nothing. I want to tell you: the system in place is broken because it is moving so slowly that it could be seen as not moving at all. We have reached a point in history where we can see and agree a thing is “wrong” much faster than we are able to stop it.

Yesterday, I returned from a two week trip to the Congo, where the war has now spread, to document the most recent atrocities being committed. But while we were out there, I had the opportunity to stop by the Rwandan genocide museum, where a man named Sergie gave me a personal tour of the memorial. For anyone who is not aware of the Rwandan genocide, it was a mass slaughter of a million innocent lives, where the world didn’t just stand by and watch; we intentionally got un-involved. When the killings began, we actually pulled every NGO, UN and government personnel from the country, right when they were needed the most. Sergie, who was a genocide survivor, told me he does not believe in institutions, only the acts of individuals to bring about change. Justice has become deeply institutionalized, and the people who publicly pursue it- have become paralyzed in the current system. Good intentions are tangled in politics and policies- and while we wait for someone to act, more lives are lost.

So, what does this have to do with you? with us? well… why not, on your birthday today decide to become the someone who acts? I want to let you in on the rumble of the underground. Our generation has learned to go around it. I know this, because I’ve experienced it. Right now, we are shaping human history by closing the divide between resources and responsibility, awareness and action- by taking action on an individual level, charged by the belief that: we will have to answer, even if we are not to blame.

If you don’t know the story of Invisible Children, I want to encourage you to find out. We are the unlikely activists, the never before demanding the never again, in unconventional ways. When we formed our non-profit, 90% of our donations were $20 and under because it was kids over here, raising money for kids over there; and, here’s the thing… when we started invisible children, we knew nothing. But we, (with a lot of help) have accomplished a lot. Our lives were changed, yes, but we have seen change in the lives of thousands of Ugandans, as well as Americans, Europeans, and so on- simply by acting on behalf of someone who is not ourselves. And the key to that formula is: we acted. We built the plane in the air, and because of that- we have had success. It has since been written into our mission statement to remain adaptable. To be willing to change. To fail. To start over. But at least we start. There are others, who knew much more than us before we even began,  who have yet to make their move. Paralyzed by their assessments and studies. Afraid. I beg you today to not be that. I beg you to take action: Write that song. Design that Dream. Develop that medicine. Get on that plane. Make your movie. Join the rumble of the underground. Do not just sit on that expensive education you just completed. Do not stay in the company of each other. There is always more to learn. And nothing in your lives so far has prepared you for the world today. But, nothing really can.

Okay, maybe you have some transferable skills from college…like how to survive solely on burritos and beer. I’m still using that one. But, since there will be no more grades to work for, and since this will probably be your last “summer break,” your reasons for working hard need to come from inside you.  Push yourself, do what is absolutely necessary, and more. Do what no one else has the guts to do- because you need to be rebellious, to defeat the rebels.

Statistics say that you should be worried….that you are entering a work force neither wanting nor needing you. And, I’m here to say: If there are no jobs waiting for you, good. Make your own jobs. Create new industries. Discover new roads.

Ok, I’ll admit- I DO regret dropping out of college- mostly because it would make my Dad proud, and I don’t like to quit- but I do not regret where my life led me because I believe in a big God who has plans and dreams that are bigger and better than anything I could ever plan or dream. And it is our job to listen, and not be afraid to act. And keep acting. And governments and universities better catch up, or continue to be bypassed by All of us.

Thomas Edison said,”When you have exhausted all possibilities, remember this — you haven’t.” And I say: Do not stop at no, but instead, keep looking for a new route to yes. For example, I never thought I’d see a UCSD graduation, but here I am, to finish what I started. And I’m speaking to the me that could have been, saying- the world is waiting. Don’t miss the invitation to join. Congratulations on graduating, and happy birthday.


May 13 2010

Being part of something.

There are few times in life where we get the opportunity to be part of something that transcends ourselves in a very real and tangible way. This past spring semester I interned as a Roadie for Invisible Children and experienced just that. The work these people do is astounding, breath taking, and so far beyond the individual; and yet, that work directly affects individuals in northern Uganda and right here in the states.

In January people all across the country rallied together in a competition on Facebook for a non-profit to win $1million from Chase Bank. Through support and unyielding persistence all across the country we were able to get over 120,000 individual votes and win the competition. With that money we were able to allocate $100k in support for Haiti and continue to push our programs forward and help our friends in Uganda.

The national tour this semester was the first of its kind, 16 Ugandan advocates came to America to put a face to numbers, to share their story, and to ask the richest country in the world to help their brothers and sisters get through school. The transformation in the lives of students was indescribable. The transformation in my life is indescribable. This tour, like so many before it, was ground breaking, life changing, and a small piece to the puzzle that is peace.

On our arrival back in San Diego we waited with bated breath as the bill we have been pushing for made its final steps to Obama’s desk. About a month ago it passed through the Senate after a hold was released from Senator Coburn. Supporters throughout Oklahoma and across the country met on the steps of Coburn’s office and camped out for 11 days before the hold was released. Then just yesterday in the House of Representatives this happened:

The people that have made this possible are truly professional amateurs.  ‘Amateur’ comes from the French word ‘Amator’ which means ‘lover’; they have done so much simply ‘for the love’. I have never worked with such an organized, motivated, competent group of people that are driven by their desire to see positive change. This love changes US policy, it changes students both in Uganda and here, and it has changed me. The sacrifice is what sets them apart. So much of the work done here is thankless, late night grunt work  that’s ensures things are running smoothly. I have been so honored to be part of this and be around a group of people that call me to dig deeper struggle stretch fight harder grow and look beyond myself.

All that to say, the last 5 months of my life have been the hardest, most rewarding, growth cultivating, tiring, bewildering, epic days I’ve experienced. The work accomplished, the realization of how people can come together and change the policy… mind blowing. There is a very real perspective of the foundation that has been set by those that came before me and knowing that without their dedication and relentless spirit none of this would be possible.

On the flip side of that coin this war isn’t over and there is still an enormous amount of work to be done. There is a weight we are leaving on the shoulders of those who choose to pick up the baton after we are gone. And that is why I have decided to come back in the fall to do it all again. To continue to spread the story, to help more people have a similar experience that will impact them. To encourage my generation out of apathy and into a movement.

I’ll be doing a lot of fund raising over the summer so that, hopefully, I can be fully focused on the work at hand come this fall.

A huge THANK YOU to everyone that was able to support me either through prayers and encouragement or financially. It was needed and so appreciated.

Peace and much love.


May 10 2010

Sunset at the Grand Canyon

I love the Grand Canyon.


Apr 7 2010

College Station, TX

It’s been a while. Life has been super busy and full of crazy schedules and neglecting to update my blog and the thousands and thousands of followers I have. :)

Here are a few pictures from my Easter Sunday with my team. I’m sure my family will enjoy seeing that I wasn’t sitting home alone on Easter. This internship has been a huge learning process and has revealed a lot.

Are we more worried about our children’s grades than their morality?

We were not created for a life of mediocrity, within each of us is the ability to change the world.

Our realm of influence is larger than we know, how are we influencing and what are our lives encouraging them to do?

If you were to spend 3 months with someone you just met, what would they say about you after wards?

“There is a fundamental truth to our nature, Man must explore.” – Dave Scott

Get out there, enjoy the world, create positive change.

This internship lasts for 1 more month. It has been so incredible! Thank you to every one who has supported me through this experience, whether financially or through encouragement and prayer, it has been much needed and greatly appreciated. This last month is going to be so good, I’m looking forward to finishing strong and concluding this tour with the same enthusiasm that I started with.

In that same breath, I still need help. Life on the road has been cheaper than I anticipated so I have made it quite far. However, it isn’t free and in order to focus all my energy into the job at hand I need a little financial stability. Any amount you can help with is needed and a huge help. Here is the link to my account through Invisible Children, (a tax-deductible donation) where they will in turn send me a check.

Thanks so much!!!


Jan 27 2010

This is the EPIC tour I’m about to embark on.

I can’t express with words alone what the last two weeks have been like. But, here is a piece of it.
Purpose. Persistence. Tired.
I know this is only the beginning and this week has really helped in setting the stage for the weeks to come. My expectations are completely gone, thankfully, and the palette is wide open and ready to absorb the newness of this season.

Last week we worked over 70hours and it was totally worth it. Every minute we got a vote and it is what saved us. We only won by 1200 votes and at the rate out competition was gaining on us if the competition went on for 18mins longer we would have lost. Thank you so much to everyone who voted! It truly is what helped us win.

Chase Bank came to the office today to officially announce us as the winner. We had multiple news stations here and it was so great. We got to be here at 5am this morning so we wouldn’t miss any action.

All in all, it is the start of something great. I can’t wait. Jump first, fear later.


Jan 20 2010

Update from ReSolve Uganda

Time to hit the ballot boxes

vote

Our friends at Invisible Children have been voted as finalists for the $1,000,000 grant from Chase Community Giving, a Facebook experiment in the fusion of social networking and social justice. Out of the 100 non-profits to enter as finalists, Invisible Children is now ranked #2. And they need our help.

Along with their development work on the ground in northern Uganda, Invisible Children has been a major partner in advancing the advocacy goals of Resolve Uganda, helping build momentum for the record breaking level of support for the LRA Disarmament and Northern Recovery Act and securing 250,000 signatures through the We Want Obama campaign – a campaign that will greatly contribute in shaping the policy goals of the administration after the passage of the legislation. This grant could also potentially aid in funding mobilization of our grassroots base in advancing future policy initiatives.

Bottom line, they’re doing good work, and we’d love to give them a hand. Roughly three clicks and you’re done. First become a fan of Chase Community Giving, found HERE, and once you’ve done that, cast your vote for Invisible Children.


Jan 19 2010

Update from the Invisible Children Blog

Live from the Invisible Children Blog:

Latest

A 30 second Vote

could give $100,000 to help

Haiti and Invisible Children!


Screen shot 2010-01-19 at 9.36.22 AM

VOTE TO SUPPORT THE WORK OF INVISIBLE CHILDREN AND THEIR RELIEF EFFORTS IN HAITI

With your 30-second vote, you can provide $100,000 of relief work in Haiti. Invisible Children is a charity working to make invisible children around the world visible. We fight to end the use of child soldiers in Uganda and the Congo, and build schools for war-affected children in the region. But in light of last weeks devastating earthquake in Haiti, we understand that our commitment in this time of crisis needs to broaden.   We are planning on implementing $100,000 in an Invisible Children relief effort to Haiti, but we need your help.

We’re a finalist in the Chase Community Giving Facebook competition to win $1,000,000 for our ‘big idea’ of ending Africa’s longest running war.

But, this contest started before the tragic earthquake hit Haiti last week and with no Haitian non-profits represented in the 100 finalists, Invisible Children felt the need to help Haiti in this time of crisis.

With the money we’ve raised through our programs (detailed at invisiblechildren.com), 760 Ugandan students have been provided with scholarships, 11 war-destroyed schools have been rebuilt and numerous microeconomic programs have been implemented to jump start village economies. A million dollars will help take these programs to unprecedented heights.

More so than at any other time in history, we are all connected as global citizens looking out for the interests of others. As we continue to help build a sustainable economy for those who have been affected by the war in Uganda, we have seen what the hope of a new beginning can bring. It’s one rooted in refusing to ignore the cries of our neighbors and providing the help needed for them to build back up a better way of life.

It’s because of this commitment that if we win, we’ll be funding $100,000 from our general fund towards our very own relief effort in Haiti.  In 2005, we sent a team for four months to help in New Orleans in the wake of Katrina, and the fruit we saw from that was powerful. Using money raised over the holidays, we will put together a team to research and travel to Haiti to contract and oversee relief work ourselves.

But this is only possible if the Chase award is won. This decision is made with confidence that continued support is necessary for Haiti to overcome the devastating impact of the earthquake.

If you do anything today, do this:  go here and take 30 seconds to cast your vote for Invisible Children, providing $100,000 to Invisible Children’s relief work in Haiti and $1,000,000 to bring child soldiers home from the battlefield and build schools for war-affected children.

Social networking has already raised $21 Million for Haiti, let’s continue to use this platform and provide another $100,000…and it won’t cost you a dime!

- Jason Russell and Laren Poole.

http://apps.facebook.com/chasecommunitygiving/charities/598099


Jan 8 2010

Awesome news, I got an internship with Invisible Children!!

Hello Friends and Fam!

I’ll jump right in.

Just this week I got an internship with an amazing non-profit organization, Invisible Children. The crazy part is it starts next week!

Invisible Children Inc. (IC) is a Non-Profit organization that was started when three young filmmakers went to Africa looking for a story to tell.  What they discovered was a 20 year long war in Northern Uganda that has affected hundreds of thousands of people, primarily children.  These children are abducted almost daily, the boys are forced to fight as child soldiers, the girls, used as sex slaves and those who refuse are murdered violently as an example to the rest.  The non-profit was birthed out of the response to the original documentary these three young filmmakers created.  Today, IC continues to work to bring peace to Northern Uganda through programs aimed at raising awareness here in the States, and provide relief on the ground in Northern Uganda.  Unfortunately, no matter how well I explain the complexities of the situation, I know that I won’t be able to fully communicate the realities of this crisis.  I truly wish I could send a copy of the DVD to each of you.  If you ever have a chance, please watch it, it’s called Invisible Children. A picture is worth a thousand words and a movie, perhaps even more.

The next national tour has divided the country into 10 different regions. The region that I was chosen for is Texas/Louisiana! Starting in January and ending in May, I will have the privilege of traveling around TX and LA with a team of three others. While we are on tour we will be screening the DVD mainly at high schools but also colleges and churches. We will be promoting a new program called Schools 4 Schools where schools in the states will team up to raise money for schools in Uganda. While living in San Diego I work 30+ hours a week in the IC office calling schools in my region trying to set up assemblies for the tour. What’s even more exciting is we will have Lilian, from the IC film GO, and her mentor on tour with us. She is from Uganda and will be sharing her story while traveling with us. This is really awesome because she puts a real tangible face to the cause of IC.

How I Need You. First and foremost I need your prayers. Please keep me in your hearts and daily prayers as I enter into this incredibly exciting and rewarding season of my life. I think it’s safe to say that this experience will stretch me like no other season has. Second, I am writing to seek financial sponsorship. This is a volunteer position and for the 5 months I’m here life goes on outside of the internship. IC takes care of transportation and has a network of people we will be staying with on the road. I have student loans and will have day-to-day expenses such as groceries, toiletries, and any unforeseen costs. Any money that comes in will help offset these expenses and is tax deductible. My goal is to raise $2500 for the 5 months. If you are able to donate I’ve added a button on my blog that takes you through Paypal, or you can send a check to IC where they have an account set up for me:

Invisible Children, Inc.

Direct Support for Taylor Swift

1620 Fifth Ave, Suite 400

San Diego, CA 92101

Thanks so much for taking the time to read all this and I look forward to sharing the adventures with you from the road.

I’ll try to keep up with the blog during the internship and post pics when I can of the venues and people we are impacting.

Below are some links if you want more info.

Thanks again,

Taylor

For more information on Invisible Children Inc. go to www.invisiblechildren.com

For more information on the current situation in Northern Uganda, go to www.ugandacan.com