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A Remarkably Normal Life

When asked a
question, Brandon buries his head behind mommy in expected bashfulness.
A few minutes later he’s rolling a ball as big as he is to everyone in
the room. Before long he grabs mommy’s hand, tugging her up from the
couch to show her something in the next room, then sits on her lap for
comfort as he rests from his long day of play.
Nothing
extraordinary, just a typical experience between a mom and her child,
but for Patty Gnefkow, advocate coordinator at Gerard House, it’s these
normal moments between Vanessa and Brandon that truly reveal an
astonishing success. If it hadn’t been for the support she received from
the Gerard House, this success could so easily have turned to
disappointment for this 17-year-old and her two-year-old son.
“Coming here was a
stepping point between where I am today and the wrong path,” Vanessa
recalls.
The Gerard House
(which is receiving first-time United Way funding in 2005) is a home for
pregnant teenagers and adults that offers a caring and supportive
environment designed to help young ladies through a difficult time in
their lives.
“In most cases, as
was with Vanessa, these young ladies’ decision-making skills aren’t as
fine-tuned as they need to be,” says Gnefkow. “We help accelerate this
process in their maturity because right away these girls will be
responsible to care for another person.”
While here, girls
get basic needs training and also go through parenting classes that help
them develop life skills necessary to care for their baby as well as how
to give CPR, how to detect domestic violence and understand legal issues
relating to mothers and babies.
Gnefkow recalls
Vanessa being scared and unsure about her future when she first came.
“I remember
thinking that I was going to be here for the next eight months and being
scared of the unknown,” Vanessa says. “But the staff became my family
and gave me a support system that provided the trust and respect to
fulfill my life.”
Vanessa was
determined and quickly set goals…for graduating, being a good mom and
becoming independent. Today, Vanessa is living on her own, caring for
Brandon, working, is on schedule to graduate high school in May, and is
already making plans to attend college and major in some type of
business.
“I was forced to
grow up so quickly and they really helped me become more independent,”
says Vanessa confidently. “They helped me develop into the young women
that I am today.”
A successful young
women according to Gnefkow.
“Vanessa is a
lovely young lady, a wonderful mother and an independent, productive
citizen,” Gnefkow says. “We knew she had a long, hard road ahead of her,
but we also knew from the moment she came that Vanessa was going to be a
success story.”
Tomorrow will be
another normal day for Brandon and Vanessa, and that’s what makes this
story so wonderfully unexpected.
See column at right to find out
more about how your support of United Way of the
Plains is helping our community. More Stories:
click here. |
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 United Way impacts the issues that matter.
Issue:
Teenage pregnancy is very high in Sedgwick County compared to
nationally.
United Way Actions:
United Way’s commitment to fund programs that get results led United
Way to allocate first-time funds to the Gerard House, a home that
focuses on the issue of helping provide support and basic needs to
expecting moms.
Results:
There is a lower recurrence of pregnancy among the ladies that go
through the Gerard House.
Meeting Basic Needs is one of four community
impact areas that United Way of the Plains formed to address the issues
that matter to this community.
See other programs funded in
"Meeting Basic Needs" impact area:
click here. |