School Day Hunger

School Day Hunger

“If you can’t feed a hundred people, then feed just one.”

– Mother Teresa

 

Today, I read a story about a boy who asked his mother to start packing him an extra lunch for school.

The mother learned that the extra lunch wasn’t for her son, but for another child who had only been bringing a fruit cup to school.  It isn’t the first time I’ve heard about a child experiencing school day hunger.

school day hunger

So, the mother, once homeless herself, did so.  She made two sandwiches every day.  She learned that the boy’s mother had recently lost her job and was struggling to make ends meet.

People came together and helped this woman.

Funds were raised to pay off all the outstanding school lunch tabs so that every child in that school wouldn’t go hungry during the school day.

This woman, by feeding one child, set off a chain reaction that led to so many more children being fed.

“I alone cannot change the world, but I can cast a stone across the water to create many ripples.” — Mother Teresa

And she did.

I started to read the comments.

Of course there was outrage that there were any children going hungry in an American public school. And there was the sadness that goes with the reality of childhood hunger.  But I saw one comment that really struck me.

A woman mentioned a sharing cart system being used at her school system.

A sharing cart.

A cart where students can put back unopened food items and where students can help themselves to said items.

What an idea!  I mean this could really help! We’ve got some students that might not qualify for free or reduced lunches or their parents might not have applied for the program but still cannot make ends meet.  Or families that fell behind their school lunch account – for whatever reason – and the child gets denied a hot lunch.  Maybe groceries were tight that week at home.  Perhaps Dad lost his job and no one could apply for benefits.  Or maybe there’s a kid who is going through a growth spurt and the hot lunch isn’t cutting it and he or she needs a second helping of something….

Welcome to the sharing cart.

A dynamic flow of the extra food that kids don’t eat that would normally get tossed – that now gets consumed by those who need it.

school day hunger

I love it.

So I called our local school’s food services department and ran the idea past them.

We’ll see where this goes from here; I’m hoping that all kinds of red tape doesn’t get in the way of feeding some hungry children.

But I can tell you one thing.  If it weren’t for the actions of that one woman – a woman I’ve never met – I wouldn’t have been inspired to place the call.

Don’t ever underestimate what the power of one can do.

What do you think of a sharing cart at your child’s school?

Summary
School Day Hunger
Article Name
School Day Hunger
Description
School day hunger exists and one woman did something she could to stop it. Her actions led to chain reactions to solve a bigger problem. Enter the idea of the 'sharing cart'!
Author
Publisher Name
EverydayWithMa
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Published by Ma
I’m Ma - a mother, a musician and artist, a comic, a wine drinker, blogger of www.EverydayWithMa.com and a sometimes coupon clipper. I love to sing and draw and make people laugh. I love snowstorms and homemade macaroni and cheese. While I’m passionate about family, mothering and the world around me, I am fully aware that I screw up on a regular basis. But nothing gets us through the screw ups like extra love, hearty laughs and sometimes a glass (or three!) of Cabernet Sauvignon.

4 thoughts on “School Day Hunger

  1. I LIKE it! Sharing is caring, and what we should always teach our children. If everyone shared what he/she had there would always be more than enough to go around. The Bible tells the story of the little boy who shared his fish and loaves with about 5000 people who had gone into the wilderness to listen to an itinerant preacher, Jesus Christ. Personally, I have long believed that the miracle wrought that day was not a mystical multiplication of one child’s lunch, but the inspiration to share exemplified by this child’s generosity. I think a sharing cart at school would be wonderful!

  2. ‘Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not.’ Dr. Seuss.

  3. The power of one is so true! – the power of the one doing the inspiring, the one being inspired… – and perhaps the most special: the one acting on that inspiration. <3

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