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Over my nonprofit career I have learned a lot, but this new adventure of starting a nonprofit is a whole new game. I want to share with you all the excitement and experience of starting a new nonprofit, from the very beginning.  

Starting the nonprofit didn’t begin the day I registered with my state secretary’s office. Nor did it start the day the incorporation letter came with my states approval. It didn’t start the day we purchased the web domain or when we came up with the name in a stroke of genius. It didn’t even start the day that I told my husband about my idea.  

The process started back in January of 2018. I was a nonprofit development director for the same youth nonprofit that my husband worked for. I worked as a full-time volunteer and stay at home mom to two toddlers. Working from home with toddlers was a job that as a new mom, that I was learning how to do! Learning the very careful balancing act of timing naptime & homeschool lessons with webinars & phone call meetings. And so, the house was as you would imagine it, a laptop precariously placed on the edge of a sofa, note pads strewn, alongside the sippy cups and piles of laundry & toys 

And so, the day that I spoke the dream out loud was the very beginning.

The work I did from home was to raise the funds for the very modest west coast salary my husband received as a program coordinator. In addition, I assisted the executive director with vision and program implementation. It was great work and it was always the intention of the executive director and my own, to eventually pay me an income once enough funds were raised to allow for additional salaries. But even without the paycheck I enjoyed the work as a glorified volunteer, because I believed in the good that it was bringing to the youth of the cities we servedBecause of the efforts of the team I worked with, the impact of program we ran was getting notice from the larger communities and even local governments. This was an exciting time.  

In January 2018 we were preparing to move to a home in an older part of our neighborhood. The home was built in the 1940’s requiring a full renovation of the kitchen, wood floors, yard and bathroom. Despite the work needing to be done, moving to this neighborhood was a dream come true. When we first put an offer on the home, I wrote a letter to the owner of the past 35 years, telling him how we were helping the youth of our city. I explained how this home would serve as a home base for the fundraising and program development for innovative youth work. I described how I worked from my small desk alongside my beautiful toddlers to ensure that youth are afforded the same opportunities regardless of their socio-economic statusThe homeowner loved the letter and soon the home was SOLD to us.  

Every day for one month I drove through the neighborhood while we renovated the old home DIY style and made it our new home. In those days Joanna Gains was my daily inspiration – and I even joke that my husband became her with his vision for beautiful design. I remember reading her book and finding similarities between her entrepreneurship and my nonprofit development. The streets surrounding the house and the boulevard that is adjacent to the historic neighborhood, to the home we had purchased had befallen to great poverty and disarray nearly 30 years prior. Very similar to the neighborhoods that the Gains were conquering on their popular TV show. The problems of the neighborhood had made the home affordable for a single income household like our own, but that meant that plight and poverty were present on every corner of the boulevard.  

 

Driving past that plight, empty buildings and issues that the streets were filled with, I felt compelled to look closer. And finally one morning my heart breaking for my neighborhood, I said out loud in a prayer & proclamation, that I would start a youth center on the boulevard, because it wasn’t fair for the kids that lived in that neighborhood to not have a beautiful space to grow into young adults and citizens of our city.  

And so, the day that I spoke the dream out loud was the very beginning.

When I told my husband he was receptive, but the path to this new dream was unclear. Our work was going well with the organization that we worked with and the programs that we had both helped to develop & install in several local schools were thriving.  

A youth center was different direction that we had envisioned up to that pointWith this new dream, our work in the schools could translate into a permanent space for youth and help our neighborhood in a small way. Another factor to overcome was that I had yet to be able to raise the funds for my own income, which our growing family could desperately useI have college loans looming over my head every day, and often I was choosing to start a new program rather than starting to pay myself first. This is a topic I hope to explore more in this blog soon.  

Needless to say there were MORE reasons to stay where we were, but the dream had been had and now it was up to us to see it through.  

–Raquel