Theory of Change #2: Capacity, Relationship & Collaboration

by | Jun 8, 2020 | ShiftHappens

Theory of Change #2: Capacity, Relationship & Collaboration

In 2007, Joe Gebbia and Brian Chesky were broke roommates trying to figure out a way to pay their rent in San Francisco. They had an idea to rent an air mattress in their apartment to strangers visiting the city for a conference. After some successes, they believed that this might be a replicable business model. Maybe even a whole company. Floating the idea to potential investors, they were widely dismissed. Nobody believed travelers would want to do this. Some people worried about liability. Others just didn’t think it was a realistic idea. Their company, Airbnb, today has over 7 million listings across the world and operates in over 220 countries.

I tell this story to illustrate that birthing something new is difficult. It can be lonely and defeating, even if the idea itself holds real promise.

Christine Gray-Pass the Taters Community Gardening Project

I see this often with individuals whose grassroots service projects we support at The Pollination Project. They tell us that they feel “abnormal” for pursuing their vision for social change, or that those around them have expressed skepticism that their idea is worth pursuing. It takes great courage and vulnerability to press on despite these circumstances, which may be why so many people hold a vision that remains unspoken or unfulfilled.

This, in part, is why financial support will never be our only focus. In uplifting individual action, which I wrote about last week, we offer seed funding and belief. Yet I believe that what sustains individual changemakers for the journey is not just money, but relationships and connection.

Our global community now includes 4,000 visionary practical dreamers. By deepening relationships with each of them, facilitating community among them, and encouraging collaboration between them, we hope to build resilience, knowledge, and self-directed communities of practice.

It is difficult to stand alone and blaze a trail, the destination to which seems only immediately clear to you. It is far easier to stand in community, toward a shared dream of acting with courage toward a kinder, more compassionate world.

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In the heart of Nkwen Bamenda III Sub Division, Northwest region of Cameroon, the pilot project "Youth and Visual Arts Activism for Social Change" unfolded at Teken Quarter Youth Community Hall. This initiative, running from January to April 2023, targeted fifteen disadvantaged youths—including school dropouts, drug addicts, and other vulnerable groups. The project, supported by a seed grant, was launched by the Collective Arts Development Association (CADA), which provided six art facilitators. These experts delivered extensive training in various artistic skills, from sketching and drawing on canvas boards to graphic design and T-shirt printing.

Participants were introduced to the fundamentals of colors, composition, and proportions, along with practical applications in screen printing on diverse materials like jeans, nylon, and polyester. The primary goal of the project was to leverage art and social entrepreneurship as viable alternatives to drug use, abuse, crime, and poverty in the local community. Furthermore, the project included an outreach program involving sixth-grade pupils from the Government Primary School in Teken Quarter.

The success of this pilot paved the way for a flagship initiative titled "Empowering Marginalized Youths through Life Skill Education Art and Entrepreneurship Skill Development." This ongoing program offers six-month intensive training sessions to thirty disadvantaged youths, teaching them not only visual and graphic arts but also audio-visual skills and crafts essential for economic independence and social inclusion. Moreover, the program includes mental health education, counseling, rehabilitation strategies, and connects participants with mental health professionals as needed, continuing to transform lives thanks to the foundational support of The Pollination Project grant.

#art #socialchange #activism #youthempowerment #mentalhealtheducation #cameroon #heartivism #grants #thepollinationproject