Perseverance

The 2019-2020 Greene Co. Tech Intermediate School theme was “Kindness,” and the principal asked the school community to launch a theme-related student service project. So why “Perseverance?” Read on, and you’ll see.


 In September 2019, 5th-grade Literacy/Social Studies Teacher, Beverly Porter, presented the mini pantry concept to her students, onboard immediately. But, Ms. Porter says, “I started to feel overwhelmed because I was going to have to talk to the Mayor or city council to get this approved. What if they didn’t approve it? My kids would be crushed.”

Undaunted, the stewards-to-be thought their school might be an ideal location. Ms. Porter, seeing a learning opportunity, asked for evidence. Four guests knowledgeable about area food insecurity visited with the kids, who also researched local food pantries—all on the opposite side of town, open specific hours, requiring ID and/or proof of address. At the school,100%.

In October 2019, the group put together a presentation and invited administrators. The assistant superintendent loved the idea and had many questions the students answered without hesitation. The superintendent, however, was not sold. (What about food tampering and vandalism?)  

The week before Thanksgiving, still waiting for the go-ahead, the group visited a neighboring community’s high school campus Little Free Pantry. They took food to help stock, then toured the Northeast Arkansas Food Bank and Mission Outreach.

Soon after the visit at the administration’s request, Ms. Porter and a student shared their presentation at a school board meeting. The board loved it and told the presenters they need not worry about building cost; two board members would pay. The following day, the school principal posted about the effort on the school's Facebook page, local news wanted to conduct interviews, and parents from other classrooms wanted to help.

Again, the students presented to the high school agri and art teachers, who agreed to build their mini.

Then, COVID.

Then, perseverance, and in February 2021, this. And a second at the primary building.

greenecountytechlittlefreepantry


Ms. Porter writes, “I have learned so much, and I believe my students have too. I always knew food insecurity was an issue, but you don’t realize how bad it is unless you are living in it every day.”

That Ms. Porter’s students learned about food insecurity is BIG. But they learned so much more.

Thanks to all who persevere when this “little” project becomes overwhelming. Thanks especially to Ms. Porter and Greene Co. Tech School District of Paragould, AR, and to all educators. This past year, you’ve taught all of us about care, grit, and rising strong despite overwhelmingly difficult circumstances.

Menstrual Equity

The first paragraph of Amanda Palmer’s outstanding The Art of Asking: or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Let People Help reads as follows:

WHO’S GOT A TAMPON? I JUST GOT MY PERIOD, I will announce loudly to nobody in particular in a women’s bathroom in a San Francisco restaurant, or to a co-ed dressing room of a music festival in Prague, or to the unsuspecting gatherers in a kitchen at a party in Sydney, Munich, or Cincinnati.
Invariably, across the world, I have seen and heard the rustling of female hands through backpacks and purses, until the triumphant moment when a stranger fishes one out with a kind smile. No money is ever exchanged. The unspoken universal understanding is:
Today, it is my turn to take the tampon.
Tomorrow, it shall be yours….
I’ve often wondered: are there women who are just TOO embarrassed to ask? Women who would rather just roll up a huge wad of toilet paper into their underwear rather than dare to ask a room full of strangers for a favor? There must be. But not me. Hell no. I am totally not afraid to ask. For anything.
I am SHAMELESS.

Of course, she knows the answer.
And when the stigma of menstruation is coupled with the shame of poverty? SNAP does not cover tampons, pads, OR toilet paper, and the COVID-19 pandemic is making period poverty even worse.

Almost everything gets taken from mini pantries, but feminine hygiene products are among the most needed items. Those who supply them are like the stranger who fishes a tampon out of their bag, making Amanda and all who witness the exchange feel triumph. We imagine those mini pantries dedicating space to and coordinating the routine donation of feminine hygiene products seem more friend than stranger.

The Pantry Tuscon

The Pantry Tucson not only prioritizes this neighbor need. The tampon it depicts front and center acts as a reminder of menstrual equity* and helps destigmatize menstruation. It’s like a best friend.

If you have a period, you know the panic of starting without supplies…the urgency of running out. Nearly 2/3 of low-income women experience panic, urgency and struggle to alleviate it.
Those who stock mini pantries can be that stranger with a kind smile. Or a best friend who works to bring about menstrual equity. Talk about it. Advocate for legislation that abolishes the “tampon tax.”
Tampons and pads are a basic, essential need, and like Amanda, it’s time for those of us with privilege to become shameless on behalf of those too embarrassed to ask.


* menstrual equity: ensuring that menstruation — and the inability to access products, information, education — does not deprive a person of their dignity or ability to participate fully and fairly in daily life

Little Vegan Pantry

@sleepypasture (IG) stewards this Dallas, TX, Little Vegan Pantry. In her project description submitted for the mini pantry map, she writes, “Vegans experiencing food insecurity often don't have access to plant-based options, so our pantry is a (tiny) way of addressing that problem in our neighborhood.”

All of us who give what we can can be mindful of the different dietary needs of our neighbors. In addition to our go-to items, we can shop with intention for items that support the following special diets:

In addition, if you live in ethnically diverse neighborhoods, add items that might be appreciated by your neighbors of another ethnicity. If you don’t know what those are, meet a neighbor and ask!