My birthday is Monday, I’m doing the Hill Country Ride again this year & I’d really love $20.57 (or $57 if you can) donations, but really any donation is more than welcome. My goal is $2,000 this year. They really need it, 2020 was a challenging year for healthcare agencies — re configuring to provide services virtually, purchasing PPE for when that can’t be done, and other added expenses.
Please donate at my Hill Country Ride page. Please pass this around, ask people I don’t know, spread the word far & wide. This isn’t going to plush offices or research that should be funded by the government. This goes to literally help people — feed them, help with meds, a dental clinic, wellness activities… They do things like feed people with a food bank, and even home cooked meals for people who are too ill to cook for themselves. There’s a dental clinic, because people living with HIV & AIDS have particular dental needs. There’s the Wright House Wellness Center — their slogan is “caring for mind, body & spirit since 1988”. And others, so — here’s an opportunity to do a good thing, that does nothing but help people. Please donate, and if you can’t donate, share.
Also, it’s my birthday and I’m just a little bit of a U2 fangirl. Just a slight, teensy bit. I can always find things they say that have to do with the AIDS Ride & the Walk. Like this bit of lyric:
Write a world where we can belong
to each other and sing it like no other
I love this video, because at the beginning, Bono says to some people hanging a Pride flag: “Be safe, be brave”. It makes me teary, because at the Chicago show, a nonbinary friend of mine got to hug Adam and got their Pride flag signed by all 4 members.
And this sweet song from Snow Patrol — see, I do listen to other bands. It’s called Lifening, and it’s about the really important things.
….just some simple kindness, no vengeance from the gods…..
And last, here’s a song from Coldplay. I put this one in my learn-to-run playlist, I love the message, and it’s the perfect pace for a walking warm up. And it works here, also. Because we are all alike. People affected by HIV/AIDS aren’t them, they’re us.
I could be you, you could be me
Two raindrops in the same sea
You could be me, I could be you
Two angles of the same view
And we share the same blood