Author: Leigh

Sandpiper

BYJULIA SUDOL

This Club Saves Lives, a philanthropic club at Carmel High School, hosted Family House’s second toiletry drive during the two weeks before October break, though its success drastically decreased compared to last year’s.

A big donation box was left in three freshman teachers’ classrooms, encouraging students to drop off any toiletries from travel size shampoo and conditioner to toothbrushes and toothpastes. After the two weeks, only 300 items were collected, signi cantly less than the 3,000 collected the previous year.

Health teacher and club advisor Leigh Cambra speculates that these results are due to the lack of excitement predominantly fueled by 2017 CHS grad Caroline Mierzwa, an intern at Family House.

“Last year, it was new and different,” Cambra says. “People had somebody on campus that was super passionate about it.”

Furthermore, natural disasters such as the hurricanes in Texas and Florida and res in California distracted This Club Saves Lives members by having them put more energy into supporting victims affected by these disasters and not enough into publicizing and encouraging the toiletry drive.

Unlike last year, when a van of students drove up to San Francisco to personally deliver the donations, Cambra plans on mailing them.

 

Thank you for another successful Thirst Gala! We raised over $3,000 for the Thirst Project. Over 150 students dined on amazing pasta donated by area restaurants, salad from Taylor Farms, bread, and sundaes served to them by the Carmel High School staff.

Thank you to our sponsors: Taylor Farms, Safeway, Nicole’s Catering, Sarah LaCasse Catering, Gusto’s Pasta & Pizza, Vesuvio, and Pasta Palate. 

 

Every February This Club Saves Lives completes the WE Are Love campaign by making Valentines for the entire school and hanging them up around campus.

We were featured on the WE Stories blog: Put Some Heart In It:

Students turn to positivity and small acts of kindness to bring their school closer together.

BY AMY VAN ES

Twelve students, 900 paper hearts and big change.

For the students at Carmel High School in California, a lot of heart is exactly what it took to make their first WE Schools campaign come to life.

“WE are Love is one of the first projects we took on,” begins Leigh Cambra, a health teacher and WE Schools leader. An action campaign centered on sharing positivity and lifting others, it was a simple way for them to get their feet wet with students creating handmade cards, marked with notes of compassion for friends, family and neighbors.

“We’re a small school and this campaign didn’t cost us much money, so we [knew] it was something we could handle,” says Leigh. All it took was $11.99 worth of colored paper—“pink, red and purple to represent love!”—from a local office supplies store and a few pairs of borrowed scissors.

The students (then just a group of 12) were eager to put their own spin on the campaign. In the end, they would print and cut out 900 heart-shaped pieces of paper—one for every student in the school—and write a personal note to each. “We met up the night before Valentine’s Day and put them all over the school,” recalls the educator. “So when [students] showed up [the next morning] there were hearts all over the place, and the kids all knew one belonged to them!”

Fun as this all sounds, it wasn’t an easy task getting this campaign off the ground. In fact, it took the group more than a month of meetings just to cut all the hearts!

“It didn’t cost anything, but it gave us such value,” she recalls. “You never know what kind of difference you can make in someone’s day. It’s nice for the kids in the group to give back and do something for everyone else, but it’s also nice for the rest of the students.”

The impact Carmel’s WE club has been able to affect in the school is wonderful, with kids sticking their WE are Love notes on binders and lockers as a reminder that they’re appreciated. As Leigh is quick to point out, though, it’s the students who may not speak out about the campaign that were likely touched the most. “You’ll never know how much it affected them,” she says warmly. “Some kids will never share their notes with others, but it really makes them feel included in the school community.”

Working with teens, the educator is aware of how cliques can divide a school and is grateful to have found a way to bring all her students together. “They’re all so segregated. The clubs they’re in, the classes they take, the friends they hang out with,” she says. “It’s great to have one combined experience and show we care for each other even if we don’t know them. We’re all here together.”

Today, Carmel’s WE club boasts 60 members. “We’re the biggest club on campus now,” exclaims Leigh. Fully grown and ready to take on more campaigns, the club doesn’t plan on leaving behind its first success as change-makers. It would disappoint the student body, after all; as the educator laughs, people will be looking forward to their hearts “every year now.”

In February a bridge in Big Sur collapsed, stranding families on the south side and limiting their ability to drive to town or even work. In an effort to provide any assistance to CUSD families living on the south side, a group of students led by Chantal Gonzalez and Caroline Mierzwa worked on getting donations and finding out what supplies the families needed. We figured out the best thing to do was buy the supplies and hike them UP the newly created trail. We ended up taking seven trips over 7 months until the bridge was replaced and opened in October. These trips allowed students and staff not living in Big Sur to get a glimpse of Big Sur life while also helping out the families. Thank you to everyone who donated, shopped, and hiked. We had many return trippers because once you did the trip once you wanted to go again.

April 20, May 4, May 16, May 30, June 27, August 29, and September 26, 2017

 

 

 

 

Club member, Caroline Mierzwa, was featured on the WE Track Your Impact blog:

Caroline Mierzwa leads WE Schools club in a toiletries drive to help families of children battling life-threatening illnesses.

BY PETER CHIYKOWSKI

Last semester, 17-year-old Caroline Mierzwa inspired Carmel High School’s WE Schools club to collect 3,300 toiletries for San Francisco’s Family House, a not-for-profit organization providing accommodations and emotional support for the families of children undergoing treatment for life-threatening illnesses at the University of California San Francisco Benioff Children’s Hospital.

The club had collected canned food and toys for charity before, but a drive on this scale was unprecedented. It was Caroline’s belief in Family House’s work—fostered during her experience as a summer intern with the organization—that moved her peers to action.

“We really got to see [an example of] someone who took an idea and ran with it,” says educator Leigh Cambra of Caroline’s leadership.

Still in its early days, Leigh helped establish the club in response to student enthusiasm after the school attended last year’s WE Dayin San Jose.

As the educator told WE during our interview, what makes the basis of Caroline leadership within the WE Schools club special is the fact that as a youth, she already has experience in affecting positive change within her community.  “So many times [our students] do really cool things when they go off to college, but to have a student do it at the end of junior year and come back to tell everybody about it—that’s huge. It inspired a lot of kids.”

For Caroline, her inspiration started at home. Growing up, she was faced with the hardship of learning first-hand how childhood illness can devastate a family, having lost her youngest cousin to lung cancer, while her seven-year-old cousin in Poland continues an ongoing battle with cystic fibrosis.

Caroline’s decision to volunteer at Family House was a natural choice. Evidently an all-in type, the teen approached Family House last summer about becoming the organization’s first live-in intern.

Hailing from the small town of Big Sur— three hours down the coast, it was a daunting move. She had never lived in the big city or apart from her parents before; the thought of her first day away from home was intimidating, for that reason and more. “I was definitely nervous about how the families would react to me,” recalls Caroline.

She learned to face her fears quickly and by day two, she was running the front desk—a position no volunteer had ever covered before. Determined to earn her keep and do all she could to support the residents of Family House, Caroline would sometimes helm the front desk until 11:00 p.m. in order to be available for guests.

Welcoming people to their home away from home reminded Caroline of what her family had gone through in Poland. Sometimes they would drive five hours to get medical treatment for her cousin and then going days without showering, while sleeping on floors and in cars.

Caroline recounts welcoming families, some of who had only just arrived by helicopters in the same clothing they had been wearing for a week “When families come up to you and say ‘I don’t have anything, do you have anything?’ To be able to say ‘Yes, we can help you’… that speaks more than words.”

One guest in particular, though, literally had a strong hold on her: a two-year-old Tibetan girl, whose family moved to America to seek treatment. While the child was still learning English, this didn’t halt communication. She would simply wrap her small hand around Caroline’s pinky finger, until she agreed to colour with her.

“She would always grab me and say, “’Play with me! Play with me,” says Caroline. “It was so heartwarming… she couldn’t really communicate with me, but she still wanted to be with me as much as she could.”

And Caroline wanted to be there—for this little girl and the rest of the Family House residents, but after five weeks living among them, it was time to return home for her senior year.

When Caroline returned to Big Sur, she looked to the WE Schools club to help continue her work for the families she’d left behind in San Francisco. The club had a reputation for helping other school clubs with charity drives and volunteer actions, as part of the WE Schools’ initiative to take one local action and one global action.

“What I like about WE is that you have the local action and the global action and it’s not directed,” comments Leigh. “By creating this club, we could do whatever we want to.”

And what the WE Schools club wanted to do was help Caroline’s new extended family.

Together, students visited freshman classrooms with Caroline sharing stories about the families she had met over her summer internship. Soon after, the ninth grade homerooms were competing to bring in donations.

By the time the drive was over, the WE Schools club needed a van to be able to transport all their boxes on a field trip to see Family House for themselves.

“They all were pretty much blown away,” says Leigh of the visit. “So often we do these drives and then somebody comes and picks it up and that’s it. For [the students] to actually see where all that stuff collected is going–watching as these families come up with their kids in wheelchairs [or seeing] kids hooked up to oxygen—it was a big eye-opener.”

As Leigh suggests, the WE Schools club provides an opportunity for Carmel students to learn beyond the classroom. “I tell them all the time: When you look back on high school, you [may not] remember what you learned in Spanish class today, but you’re going to remember those experiences you had and the people that had an impact on you.”

For Caroline, working with the club to support a cause–the people–close to her heart was an unforgettable experience. “It’s really touching for my [own] family,” shares Caroline. “They’re all exposed to hospital hardship, and for them to see that I am trying to make a difference in the lives of families who are undergoing what they went through… it’s just really touching.”


The Class of 2020 had a competition between their social studies/health classes to collect toiletries for Family House. Over 3,000 items were collected and distributed to families. Family House serves as a home away from home for families of children with cancer and other life-threatening illnesses by providing physical comfort and emotional support, free from financial concerns.