Monday, November 22, 2010

IndividUUality, Part 1

“In this familiar place, listen: Find the silence among these people and listen to it all - breathing, sighs, movement, holding back - hear the tears that have not yet reached their eyes perhaps they are your own hear also the laughter building deep where joy abides despite everything. listen: rejoice.” -Barbara Pescan

My first Con experience was summer Con ‘08: the Con that everyone groans at collectively knowing what the aftermath was. For those who don’t know, these things were not good (to say the least) and almost tore our community apart. However, I don’t think I would have come back to the Con community if I hadn’t gone to the alleged "summer Con." But that isn’t my point. My point is from that Con came the growth that has happened over the past few years. Last year at Fall Con 09’- TheologiCON, much of the community was renewed through the efforts of the YES team (Youth Empowerment Services), the Con staff, and everyone who participated. I am extremely happy to say that these efforts have been up held at our most recent Fall Con ‘10, IndividUUality. I could tell you that we had no CAC's (Conference Affairs Committee), but that truly doesn't give you a clear picture of what happened during the weekend. It wasn’t just the efforts of YES and the staff, it was YOU; the con community as a whole took part in making a stronger, safer, and loving community.

Planning a Con... is...well, hectic.
After debating about T-shirt colors for about two hours during our 2nd official Con meeting, we finally got down to business. We then we realized how much work we had cut out for ourselves. I remember in the meeting looking over at Ian Grendon (my co-worship planner), and seeing the look of “...Oh my chalice... What have I gotten myself into?” Through many emails, text messages, phone calls, google docs, and a trip to Olympia (and procrastinating and watching old episodes of the TV show The Dinosaurs), we managed to get worship planned out... for the most part... though both of us did forget to get the final script printed out before leaving for Con.

As Worship planner and YES team member I was running around (with Ian) all weekend while very sick with a terrible cold. Though I didn’t feel that I was a part of the community as much as I wanted to be, I still felt very connected. Being a part of a worship vs. leading a worship is a very different experience. I wanted to give everyone powerful and meaningful worship experiences, which was very stressful. Much of Saturday and Friday was spent making sure things were going to run smoothly later in the night, but as Ian and I realized, we can’t plan everything. This Con was truly a learning experience.

Friday night’s worship was... interesting. Not exactly what we planned to be. We knew going in that it was not going to be the strongest worship. However we learned, and grew, and knew we could take this knowledge on to the next worships.
Saturday night worship was the most challenging: we had no idea how it would go, and our prayers to the weather gods hadn’t worked as a steady rain fell. During setup we were running around, hoping that the rain wouldn’t put out the fire and candles, while simultaneously freaking out about whether anything would catch fire. Not to mention wondering how long people could bear the rain and in general how the heck we would make this work.

However, I think Saturday night’s worship was made even more powerful by the rain. My thoughts as we walked down to the fire pit, half screaming, half hoarsely singing were...well, probably not blog appropriate. But as we read aloud in the rain, with my cracking voice and Ian’s calm and collective manner, I realized what we had done and accomplished together. We had created a space for people, everyone if they wished, to search. To search deep within themselves and stretch to the limits of their existence, of their hearts, minds and souls.

I was reaffirmed by this constantly looking upon the faces of the community as they threw their pieces of wood - representing their barriers - into the fire while singing. It was an experience I will never forget. It was as if I had a bird's eye view of everybody’s light, their pulsing souls. Looking in on something so private, but utterly welcoming, I knew we had done well and I have the community to thank for truly respecting worship and helping create a scared space.

Sunday worship was gratifying, after the tremendous strain we put on ourselves for Saturday night's worship. It was a way to ease our pains as we knew this weekend was coming to a close. As worship planners, our hopes were that people would carry these worships/Con experiences with them: a beacon of light and to act on what they had experienced, the experience of remembering their pains and joys, breaking down barriers, and then transforming them into something positive. Something that will better you, the community, the world.

I love our Con community. I am proud to say that the next generation of Con attendees will carry out the culture we put forth, which is not to say we don't have room for improvement. This community will always will be growing, expanding, changing, for the better.


As my co-worship planner put so poetically, reflecting on the Con experience:
"I felt so old. In less than 48 hours, I had experienced the loss of friends forever, the failures and victories of love, the inevitable progression of people throughout the Con world, and more love, recognition, and appreciation than I’ve ever had in my life." - Ian Grendon

Thank you, everyone. To everyone that went to Fall Con. To everyone that cried, laughed, sang, danced, played Lap Tag, smiled, and hugged. To everyone a part of the Con community.

And remember: “We are raising up like the phoenix of the fire, so brothers and sisters spread your wings and fly higher....”

Thank you.

In faith,
Elissa
Co-Worship planner of Fall Con ‘10- IndividUUality
YES Team


“Let us open ourselves, here, now,
to the process of becoming more whole-
of living more fully,
of giving and forgiving more freely,
of understanding more completely the
meaning of our lives here on earth.”
-Timothy Haley

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Con Evaluation: IndividUUality

For the first time at this Con, we had some evaluation of the event by the overall attendees.  How did Con go overall? 

 Overall Evaluation:
5 ratings (super happy face) :  67%
4 (slightly happy face) :          28%
3 (neutral face) :                     5%
2 (slightly unhappy face) :        1%
1 (very unhappy face) :            0%

Favorite parts of Con:
No-talent show:                    79%
Touch groups:                       67%
Workshops:                          51%
Worship:                              50%
Main workshop:                     44%
Spirit Corps:                         21%

What would you change?
The top answer was "the rain," which unfortunately we can't help you with.

Top answers:
Vary music at the dance
Make con longer
Longer worships
More supplies for henna/hair dye
More free time
After-worship campfire time
Newbie orientation
Inclusive first-night games
Better privacy
More theme-related workshops

How would you make Con more inclusive?
Most of these answers focused on Friday night and helping new attendees feel part of the community more quickly; second was the ability to have solo time or more personal space.

  • Friday night games / mixers
  • Have older / more experience con-goers reach out to newcomers better (newcomers can feel it's hard to approach others who clearly know each other well)
  • Mix-up people at meals
  • Con buddies
  • Get "lei'd" at registration so you know right away who new people are
  • Have 1st touch group before orientation, so you've got some people to sit with / talk to right away
  • Pre-Con information: have a video, explain more about what happens
  • Area for quiet people or smaller "coffee house" type talent show
  • More active games (e.g. capture the flag, ultimate frisbee - the rain made this hard)

Thursday, October 28, 2010

YRUU Update From Tacoma and Fall Con 2010

This year my youth group has chosen to have a curriculum (The Wholeness Curriculum). It has been going surprisingly well. Everyone in my youth group, with the exception of one brand new person, i have grown up with and im seeing sides of them I probably would have never seen, in a good way. Also, as i write this it is four days after Fall Con 2010 and I can not describe or express how amazing Con is. It means so much to me to have it, the oppurtunity to sneak away from reality for a little while. I truly dont know what id do without it. I just wish more people from my congergation would go, oh well, hopefully that will change. So yeah, everything is going good in "T-Town" (Tacoma) YRUU!!!

Seriah Mehegan
Tacoma UUC

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

What's YES team up to, anyway? (and how does it involve me?)

YES has got some awesome projects in the works for the 2010-2011 year - check it out to see how you can be involved! The main ones are...

Congregational call-down: Over the past few weeks, YES members have been in the process of calling all the congregations in our district to make a connection to DREs, youth advisors, and youth. We especially wanted to find out what we could do to help congregations that have traditionally been less involved with PNWD youth programming take full advantage of all the opportunities at the district level.

How you can help: If there is something you would like to see the district do or improve regarding the needs of your congregation's youth group or program, talk to a YES member. We want to know how we can help, and it would be great to hear it directly from the youth, since we've mostly been talking to DREs and advisors on our calls.

Spirit Corps: This fall con, we'll be seeing some improvements to Spirit Corps, including a more active and defined role for process observers and color-coded energy maps to track how the atmosphere in the various "hang-out areas" changes over time. Sound cool? Come to con to see it in action.

How you can help: Sign up for Spirit Corps, of course! It's loads of fun, and you get to help strengthen the awesomeness that is the con community!

Social action project 1: In light of the UUA (national) focus on immigration justice and the recent decision to hold the UUA General Assembly 2012 in Phoenix, Arizona as a "Justice GA", we'd love to do an immigration-related, district-wide social action project; perhaps applying for UUA
grant money as needed. It would be a great way to build PNWD youth interest in attending GA 2012. We are presenting this idea to the University Unitarian Church youth group as an option for this year's SPAG theme, but if that doesn't work out, we'll look to other possibilities.

How you can help: Educate yourself on immigration issues (this piece by UUA President Peter Morales is an interesting place to start) and look into attending General Assembly. We'll let you know more ways you can help with this once we figure out what the project is going to look like.

Social action project 2: Our idea is that every youth group that wants to participate will organize a showing of The Laramie Project (a film about Matthew Shepard, a gay man who was killed in 1998 in Laramie, WY, a victim of hate crime) at their church. The movie showing would be a fundraiser for an appropriate charity (TBD) and would take place in February in honor of Valentine's Day and the right of all people to love whomever they choose, regardless of gender.

How you can help: Spread the word in your youth group and throughout the district and spearhead a showing in your congregation! We will soon be providing resources to help you start organizing.

This blog! We're planning to have two posts per month, one by a YES member and one by another PNWD youth.

How you can help: You're already contributing to the blog just by reading it (thank you). If you want to help even more, spread the word - tell your youth group, Facebook friends, parents, DREs, etc to check out pnwdyouth.blogspot.com. In addition, if you have an idea for a post, let us know!

Hope you all are having a great start to the school year, and I look forward to seeing you (or meeting you, if I haven't yet) at fall con!

In faith,
Sonrisa Alter
YES Co-chair

Back to School, Back to Youth Group

With September bearing down upon me, my life is revolving around back-to-school… and back to youth group. This will be my senior year of high school and I have to say that it hasn’t gotten any easier, though I’m coming to realize that this will be the last time I have to deal with the crazy stresses of coming back to high school. This will be my last first day of school (because obviously college doesn’t count), and my last year of youth group. While I’m excited to have my high school career finally be coming to an end, it’s going to be a bittersweet goodbye. I love my youth group and it is one of the few consistent things in my life. I know that every week I will go in on Sunday morning and there will be people who accept and welcome me for exactly who I am. So, knowing that this year will be my last to experience with this amazing group of people I want to make an impact, I want it to be meaningful.

Last year my youth group didn’t do a whole lot, and I have a feeling that it’s a pretty common thing within other youth groups as well. Now I’m not saying that just hanging out isn’t fun, it totally can be, but just hanging out week after week, not having much direction or purpose, can be boring. The inertia of a group can be deadly. So, my big goal this year is to really get my youth group doing things! I want to be able to take more away from my weekly meeting than “good meeting” or “nice to see everyone!” I want to carry my youth group in my heart all week and not just have it be an hour-long “thing” every Sunday. I want youth group to be a place where I feel lifted up, and school, along with all the other crap in my life, is forgotten about for a little while, because if I’ve learned anything it’s that it will all still be there once youth group is over.

The first step I’m taking towards accomplishing my goal is talking to my youth advisor about some sort of curriculum that will engage all the members of my group. It helps that I live with the DRE of my church (my mother), so I can talk to her at any time and see what she thinks might work or what she’s heard of as far as high school youth group curriculums. My youth advisor and I have talked about this some and are thinking about making something of our own up, which is both exciting and daunting. Mostly I just want my group to bond and feel a connection beyond being in the same room every Sunday. We share more than we might think, because I feel like we see more of our differences. We should be able to share our ideas and feelings and know that they’re not only heard but also respected and received with love.

So, with a goal in place, and a plan of action, I head into the new school year. Let’s hope that school doesn’t cause too much stress and I wish everyone a great start with back-to-school, back to youth group!

What’s your youth like? What’s the most memorable effort your youth group has made?

Rebecca Cloe
Unitarian Universalist Community Church of Washington County (Hillsboro, OR)

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Just Getting Started!

You found us!  I feel like we've bought a new home: there's a lovely outline, but we've yet to bring in all our comfy couches and pillows and paint the walls, and make it ours.

This blog is being started and moderated by the YES (Youth Empowerment Services) team, the youth governance team for the PNWD district.  As we get started, we aiming to have updates from the YES team *and* from Youth Group reps throughout the district.  Want to talk about how awesome your youth group is?  Leave a comment at the end of this post. 

We'll also be adding links to other youth resources (like con forms! and event information!), photos, calendars, etc... so do check back!  You can also "like" us on facebook, and we'll send status updates when cool stuff happens.  Check it out here:  www.facebook.com/PNWDYouth

This site is moderated by our YES team!  Our current administrators are Devon from Corvallis and Amber from Eugene.  You're welcome to leave comments; they will be reviewed before posting.  Abide by the Seven Principles, and you'll have no problem.  You're free to disagree with others as long as you do so respectfully (tip: focus on the action or behavior, not the person).  If we receive offensive commentary, we will not approve it.

All right, I'm off to tidy the place up a bit, and add more items of interest.

Cheers, Anne-Marie (YES Team Coordinator)