Sep
30

SoleRebels at the Clinton Global Initiative

By Kelsey

Bethlehem Tilahun the founder of SoleRebels the shoe company I profiled in a recent piece for the World Vision Report recently spoke at the Clinton Global Initiative.

How cool is that?

I believe that SoleRebels is a perfect example of how the apparel industry can be an important tool in lifting people in places like Ethiopia out of poverty.

I spent hours with Bethlehem in her factory and I still am amazed at how a flat tire on the side of the road in Addis Ababa is fashioned into a shoe and sold on Amazon.

Bethlehem starts speaking at around the 13-minute mark.

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Sep
29

Skunk Yard Wars

By Kelsey

With a can of insect repellent and a shovel, I approach the skunk’s lair.

And Part 2: The hole is filled! Bring on the skunk.

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Sep
28

I wish I knew (in college) what I know now

By Kelsey YouTube Preview Image

A knock on the door. Mute button. Silent giggles.

The knocker was Terry our RA. We called him worse things. He was treated like a substitute teacher. His endless threats were powerless to stop the amount of hallway urination, dorm room pot smoking, and an actual kegger in my neighbor’s room complete with Bon Jovi karaoke.

Poor Terry.

As he knocked he should’ve known that we were going to be trouble. A good part of the hallway residents were jammed in my room playing Madden. It was the first week of college and we were mutinous already. It was Terry’s job to bring us all to hear the author of My Own Country our freshman common reader program book by Abraham Verghese.

Verghese, born in Ethiopia to Indian parents, was working in Johnson City, TN, when AIDS hit. Library Journal said that My Own Country “provides a heartfelt perspective on the American response to the spread of AIDS.”

I didn’t read it. I was too busy running for 300+ yards per game with Barry Sanders on Madden football. While Veghese shared his story with our classmates who should’ve read the book, we were locked in a heated tournament surrounding our PlayStation.

Actually, I don’t remember how many yards I ran for with what player on what team. Over the years I’ve had some heart-pumping moments that ended with last second heroics or heartbreak courtesy of Madden, but I can’t recall a single one. Yet I still remember that twinge of guilt as we hid in my room waiting for Terry to leave so we could get back to the game.

I worry about my karmic balance. This year I was the author of the freshman common reader at several schools. I talked about Where Am I Wearing and how the experience has made me a more active global and local citizen. I encouraged students to get the most out of school, to be a local and pitch-in to help folks in their own community, and to travel.

I was talking to myself. Not that the audience wasn’t engaged, but I was trying to reach the eighteen-year-old me. I enjoyed college. I wasn’t a big partier but I liked the free time. I spent some of it playing Madden but I also played tennis and basketball, lifted weights, and became a reader. But I didn’t embrace the experience like I should have. I should have studied abroad. I should have worked with more programs in the Oxford (Ohio not the UK; I’m not that smart) community. I was very selfish with my time in college. Now that I have less time to share, I deeply regret that I didn’t give more of myself in college.

Over the past two weeks I’ve met some amazing, engaged college students who are fully embracing the college experience. I’m so jealous.

For the past two Tuesdays I haven’t reported where my $10 went. The first Tuesday I gave it to Elmhurst College’s Global Poverty Club. And the second Tuesday I gave my $10 to UCAN at Wingate University which focuses on community service and social awareness. It’s groups like this that I should have taken advantage of when I was in school because a weekend volunteering is more memorable than a weekend playing Madden on Playstation.

This week I’m doing something a little different with my $10. I’m buying Abraham Veghese’s My Own Country. I’ll read it, and then pass it on to a college student.

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Sep
27

Man vs. Skunk: Round 2 The Backyard Showdown

By Kelsey
Cartton by Geoff Hassing of geofftoons.com

Cartoon by Geoff Hassing of geofftoons.com

10 PM. The air is cool and crisp. It’s one of those September days where the daytime is summer and the evening fall.

It’s rare to knock on the front door of your own house, and at such an hour. But I do. It’s even rarer to be knocking on your front door wearing only underwear. But I am.

Yesterday morning we awoke to the smell of skunk. I’m rather adverse to the smell. Not that anyone enjoys the smell besides my aunt, but the musky rank stank of skunk turns my stomach and gives me flashbacks. You see, I had a rather memorable run-in with a skunk while jogging in high school.

I wrote a story about it. You can read it below the cut.

So, when we awoke to the smell yesterday, I was less than thrilled. We hoped that the skunk had been hit on the road and the wind was blowing just right. We couldn’t have been that lucky.

I checked the perimeter of the house, which sounds much more manly that it was because I was tiptoeing. I was also holding Harper, not as a shield but I’d be lying if I said the thought didn’t cross my mind. That’s when we discovered the hole in the landscaping. At the bottom of the hole was a nest of yellow jackets. They buzzed about riding the updrafts of skunk stank like hang gliders. A series of coarse little skunk turds sat just outside the hole.

You didn’t have to be a CSI to deduct what had happened. The skunk dug a hole to get to the bees. The bees weren’t happy and went after the skunk causing it to express it’s awful little anal glands and to crap itself at the same time.

I called up the critter control guys and ran my hypothesis by them.

“Doubt, he’ll be back,” they said of the skunk. “He probably got what he wanted and learned his lesson.”

It was with these words echoing through my head that I stepped out the backdoor in my underwear with confidence and said, “here skunky skunkerson.”

Annie had just given me a haircut and she asked me to shake out the cape of clippings because it was dark and she was afraid of the skunk.

I stepped onto our back porch and no sooner than “skunkerson” left my mouth a black and white fur ball scurried between Annie, standing at the sliding door, and me, frozen with mouth wide-open like I had seen Medusa.

I ran the opposite direction across the yard; the mostly full moon displaying the sight for all to see — the cape trailing behind me, a tail of shining hair clippings in my wake. I may have been making a noise that is best translated as “eek” but I believe it was too high-pitched for humans to here.

I bounded across the yard and to the front door and began knocking, not a normal “please, allow me to enter” knock but a “Oh my God! Oh my God! A zombie is chasing me and if you don’t open this darn door now I’ll be infected, and once infected I’ll make it the one true cause of my reanimated-self to track you as long as my half-eaten legs will carry me to find you and eat you very slowly” knock. But skunks smell worse than zombies, so I think my knock might’ve been even a little more panicked than that.

Annie didn’t answer.

The last I saw of the skunk he was running around the opposite side of the house. The front door would be about the half-way meeting point. I knocked while staring at the corner of the house, willing my eyes to penetrate into the moon shadow.

Where is she!

I cursed at myself and at Annie. We’ve lived here for three years. That’s over a thousand days that we could’ve done an emergency skunk drill: If I’m at the back door and a skunk runs by, I’ll prance across the yard in my underwear to the front door and you let me in. Got it?”

Instead of waiting for me at the front door, Annie was waiting for me at the walk-in door of the garage.

I stood in my underwear, my knocks and fears rising in crescendo. There aren’t many scenarios that would have me standing at my front door in my underwear for all the neighbors to see, but this was one.

Annie came to the door. I burst through and slammed the deadbolt shut behind me.

The skunk is still out there. There are new little skunk turds by the hole this morning. I fear this story isn’t over and that it scurries towards tragedy. Today I’m going to pour a cup or two of gasoline down the hole and fill it in.

Pray for me.

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Sep
24

The Art of Thank You

By Kelsey

I take criticism better than I take praise. This is something I need to work on.

The past two weeks I’ve visited with three universities (Elmhurst College, Pfeiffer University, Wingate University) that have used Where Am I Wearing in their common reading programs. More than once after being introduced I stepped to the mic and said something like, “I need you to introduce me to my wife and daughter each time I walk in my house.”

I reward a very thoughtful introduction with an attempt to capitalize on a few light chuckles. Here’s Deb Burris introducing me at Pfeiffer…

The correct response to an introduction like this is simple: thank you.

I worked my butt off to make Where Am I Wearing the best book I could make it. I’m absolutely honored that I get the chance to reach students and readers across the country. Introductions like Deb’s are validations of that hard work and I need to accept them with the graciousness and appreciation with which they are given.

How do you take praise?

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Sep
23

To the Art of the Matter at MRHS

By Kelsey

I had a grand ‘ol time speaking with students at Marvin Ridge High School today south of Charlotte.

Where Am I Wearing? was selected for their community reading program and a good portion of today was dedicated to exploring the subjects I write about in the book.

They kicked off the day with a screening of the documentary China Blue which follows a few factory girls at a factory in China. The film had some amazing scenes and I’m so jealous of the access the crew got into the factory. The owner of the factory was kind enough to go on camera time and time again and hang himself, saying things like, “The workers are simple-minded farmers, living 20 years behind. They aren’t smart enough to have a work ethic.” One of the main girls in the film didn’t receive a paycheck for 3 months. My only criticism of the film is that they should’ve shown the other side of these labor wrongs — the 400 million Chinese that have been lifted out of poverty by their growing economy.

My talks went well. Although my slide-show, because of a glitch on my computer, didn’t fire up properly for the first talk and I had to wing it. I don’t have trouble winging it; I can talk about this stuff all day long, slide-show or not. However, I was really hoping to expose the kids to some of the images especially of the dump. A few teachers told me that they were having trouble getting through to the students. There was a bit of “Why should we care” attitude. I don’t expect the day changed those with that attitude, but I hope that the movie, my talk, and my class visit helped chip away at that attitude. As the principal said today, “We don’t see the results of our work until many years down the road.”

Gotta love teachers and the awesome work they do. MRHS has some good ones. A special thanks to Linda Meckes and Lindsey Arant for all of their hard work.

One of the highlights of my day was visiting Mrs. B’s art class where they had done projects surrounding topics in Where Am I Wearing?. Here they are. Enjoy…

THE OLD FARMER
How amazing is this?!?!? It’s subject is the old farmer who hadn’t gone to Fantasy Kingdom in Bangladesh until the day I took him.

HANDS OF A LABOR LEADER

MADE IN CHINA

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Sep
20

A (sideways) update on my speaking tour

By Kelsey

This is a bit longer than I intended and much more sideways, but the longer I talked the longer my legs got to rest. It was shot at Morrow Mountain State Park in Biden, NC. I made the mistake of parking my car at the top of the mountain - an easy place to begin a trail run but a not so easy place to end (a trail crawl).

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Sep
16

Southern Hospitality is a Saab

By Kelsey

An update from Charlotte:

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Sep
13

Where Am I Wearing as a Common Reader

By Kelsey

One of my favorite moments to recollect from my “Where Am I Wearing?” trip was when Dewan (worker in Guangzhou) asked if I would write about him in my book. Then thhere was the idea of a book - no contract, no agent, nothing written but for a few month’s worth of blog posts. At the time, the moment, made me a little uneasy. Besides not knowing what to tell Dewan, I wasn’t sure what to tell myself. Was the experience bookworthy? I thought it was, but would agents and publishers agree?

Last year I started to get invites from universities across the country who wanted me to come to speak at/with their students. I had an absolute blast doing it. Usually a few classes had read my book, but the first experience for many of them to me, my underwear, and our crazy quest was me gibbering away in person.

I’m really excited that this fall the level of interest in “Where Am I Wearing?” continues to grow. Several schools have selected it for their “common reading programs,” buying it for all of their incoming freshman. How cool is that?!? At the time this posts I’ll be chatting with students at Elmhurst College. Over the course of the next two days I’ll meet approximately 600 students who have (were supposed to) read WAIW. And over the next two week, as I travel to several schools in the Charlotte-area, I’ll meet thousands more.

When I read about bestsellers and how many 100s of 1000s of copies they sell, it can be depressing. I feel like small potatoes. But then I think about Dewan and how a small stadium of people have read about him. I can’t help but smile.

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Sep
13

SoleRebels piece on the World Vision Report

By Kelsey

IMG_9274

Some folks believe that the apparel industry somehow is part of the problem when it comes to global poverty. To me giving someone a job and dignity is one of the best ways to fight poverty. I’ve yet to come across a better example of this than the shoe company SoleRebels in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

SoleRebels’ employees are paid about 300% more than other such workers in Ethiopia. All of the products that go into making a SoleRebels shoe are within a 60 mile radius of the city. As Bethlehem, the founder of SoleRebels, says, “We are green by heritage.”

The piece airs on loads of radio stations across the country this week. It’s my first full length audio feature. Boy was it a lot of work. So, the least you could do is…

Give it a listen. Check out the slideshow. Go buy a pair of SoleRebels.

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©2009–2012 Kelsey Timmerman
All Rights Reserved.
Contact Kelsey hi@kelseytimmerman.com

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