5 Super-Moms Making a Difference

On any given day, a mother exhibits at least one superpower — whether it’s finding the missing Lego piece in the abyss of a playroom or staying up all night to keep tabs on a feverish toddler. One thing is certain: Motherhood is a responsibility like no other. We’ve found five exceptional mothers who not only are successfully raising their own kids, but also helping hundreds of other children and families in their own communities and beyond. Here are the women giving the definition of motherhood a much broader meaning.

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Kimberly Gomez founded STAY RVA to help Richmond public schools thrive.

KIMBERLY GOMEZ: THE MOM WHO EMPOWERS URBAN SCHOOLS

Richmond, Virginia, has a knack for offering amazing culture — respectable art museums, innovative cuisine, historic neighborhoods — in the most accessible way, making this riverside city incredibly kid-friendly. The problem? Once kids are ready for elementary school, many families either cough up the tuition for private school or relocate to the suburbs. This is especially true for white children, with only 27 percent enrolling in the city’s public schools.
Kimberly Gomez, mom to three kids under age 6, didn’t want to fall in line with the status quo, and so last year she founded STAY RVA, a parent-led movement to support and enhance the public education system in an effort to encourage other families to stay in Richmond.
“It just didn’t seem right to have a school around the corner and not have your kids go there,” Gomez says. “It’s part of our community.”
Having spent more than a decade teaching in urban schools in Washington, D.C., and Houston, Gomez understood that tapping into the pulse of a neighborhood can create positive changes. “I started thinking about the resources that lie within people — those skill sets can be brought in, and there can be a bridge connecting the community with the school to help it thrive.”
In its first year, some of STAY (Supporting Together Area Youth) RVA’s projects included redecorating school bathrooms and staff lounges, preparing a lunch spread for custodians and starting a cross-school club, called Be the Change, to empower kids with activities like yoga and art lessons.
The changes taking place are not just within the schools; Gomez is noticing how parent volunteers are shifting their views about staying put in Richmond. Since STAY RVA’s launch party, 10 additional gatherings have taken place across different neighborhoods. Each was hosted by a local family to share ideas of what parents can do not just for their child, but for all students attending public schools in Richmond.
“I really feel the spirit in the outpouring of local business support,” says Gomez. “Everyone has so many gifts and talents and resources, and this is a movement where all of those can be used for a greater purpose.”

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“Every time a donor gives us a dollar, they are hiring us to solve a problem,” says the Miracle Foundation’s Dianne Holbrook (center).

DIANNE HOLBROOK: THE MOM WHO WANTS TO HELP 8 MILLION KIDS

Dianne Holbrook’s job is to help put the Miracle Foundation, where she’s the executive vice president, out of business by 2040 — that is, to join forces with other international organizations and find permanent homes for the estimated 8 million children around the world who live in orphanages.
Holbrook sponsored her first orphaned child in India 18 years ago, around the same time that her friend and former colleague, Caroline Boudreaux, started the Miracle Foundation on Mother’s Day in 2000. Two years later, Holbrook took her then 15-year-old son, Christopher, to meet the child. “It changed him completely,” she recalls. “He went to India as a boy and came back as a young man.” (Christopher has been sponsoring a child of his own ever since.)
It was a move that would eventually put Holbrook on a dramatically different path, from a high-profile career in network television sales to nonprofit executive.
Seeing that, even in the depths of extreme poverty, the children were beyond grateful for even the most basic displays of affection fueled Holbrook’s admiration for the foundation’s efforts. So when, last year, she received a call from Boudreaux to join the team, she jumped at the chance.
Currently, the Miracle Foundation sponsors over 7,000 children globally; has sent close to 200 kids to college; and has reunited about 500 children with their families (about half the orphans Miracle Foundation works with have a living parent who had been unable to provide for them).
Given that in the U.S., group homes and foster care have replaced traditional orphanages, the organization plans to roll out a social-networking app early next year targeted to foster families in Texas, with plans to expand to other states in the future. The app will help foster parents make sense of an incredibly complex system by providing resources, like hiring a vetted babysitter or scheduling meetings with social workers, at their fingertips.
“It’s a privilege that I was invited to be a part of this organization,” adds Holbrook. “I get to be a mom all over again.”

Serese Marotta joined Families Fighting Flu after losing her 5-year-old son, Joseph, to the virus in 2009.

SERESE MAROTTA: THE MOM WHO FIGHTS THE FLU

Influenza may not be new, but the brutality of this past flu season has shown that it is a vicious adversary. Families Fighting Flu, a national volunteer-based advocacy nonprofit dedicated to protecting children and communities, wants to show the public what the flu really is: a wolf in sheep’s clothing.
“It’s not just a bad cold,” says Serese Marotta, chief operating officer for Families Fighting Flu in Arlington, Virginia, who lost her otherwise healthy 5-year-old son, Joseph, to the virus in 2009. “It can be a serious, highly contagious disease.”
Marotta was an environmental scientist who made sure both Joseph and his then 7-year-old sister got their flu vaccines — except at the time, the nasal spray did not protect against the strain of H1N1 her son contracted. Joseph was one of nearly 350 children in the U.S. who succumbed to the pandemic during the 2009–’10 flu season; to date, there have been more than 1,600 influenza-associated pediatric deaths since the CDC started tracking that data in 2004. “I had no idea how many healthy children lose their lives to flu every year,” says Marotta.
Six months later, she began speaking on behalf of Families Fighting Flu to local health departments, schools and coalitions. “This is a place for families just like mine,” she says of the organization. “We reach out with support because we have walked this path.” Marotta’s active involvement led her to her current role, in which she both serves as a pillar for families coping with a heartbreaking situation and raises awareness of flu as a public health concern.
By sharing her own tragic story Marotta knows her work is instrumental. “I have changed people’s mind about the flu,” she says. “I’ve had people come up to me after [a talk] and say, ‘I know I should be vaccinating, but I never realized how important it is until today.’ Knowing that I am making a difference, and potentially saving other people from being seriously affected by the flu, makes my work worthwhile.”

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Sarah Yore-Van Oosterhout opened Lighthouse Immigrant Advocates to help undocumented immigrants who couldn’t afford legal counsel.

SARAH YORE-VAN OOSTERHOUT: THE MOM WHO GIVES OTHERS A VOICE
Imagine if an 8-year-old girl (falsely) accused your 12-year-old son of sexual assault, and then he was harassed by a local police officer and hauled off to jail. Now imagine how much worse it would be if you didn’t know what to do because you believe your immigration status prohibited you from advocating on behalf of your child.
“Undocumented immigrants have come to associate law enforcement with deportation, and the fear of being separated from their family is often far worse [than not reporting a crime],” says attorney Sarah Yore-Van Oosterhout, founder of Lighthouse Immigrant Advocates in Holland, Michigan.
Given that Michigan has about 150,000 undocumented residents, Lighthouse was a much-needed resource in the state. Yore-Van Oosterhout recognized that the people who would most benefit from legal counsel were the ones who could least afford it, and so in 2015 she opened Lighthouse to provide low-cost legal services, education and advocacy. To date, the nonprofit has worked with more than 650 families, helping them to understand their constitutional rights and preparing paperwork, like the guardianship of minors in the case of deportation. Lighthouse also hosts workshops at area schools, churches and businesses on immigration law and policy, and advocates on the local, state and federal levels.
As a mother to two young daughters, Yore-Van Oosterhout knows first-hand the importance of having a strong support network. “My parents come once a week to take care of my girls,” she says. “I couldn’t do the work that I do without their support.” It’s an opportunity she wants everyone to have, but current immigration laws often keep families apart. “We’re forcing them to be separated for decades and to try to survive and thrive without the support of family. It’s cruel.”
In a world that can be unwelcoming to immigrants, everyone who comes through Lighthouse’s doors are treated with the utmost dignity and respect, says Yore-Van Oosterhout. “It is so important for us that they are valued and welcomed. I hope my girls, who are at the office with me, are seeing that.”
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As CEO of New Moms, Laura Zumdahl helps provide housing and career counseling to young mothers.

LAURA ZUMDAHL: THE MOM WHO BELIEVES IN SECOND CHANCES
Motherhood is easy, said no one ever — least of all, young mothers disadvantaged by poverty, homelessness and poor social support.
“It’s hard to parent, let alone think about how to go back to school if you don’t know where you’re going to spend the night,” says Laura Zumdahl, president and CEO of New Moms in Chicago. For the past 35 years, the nonprofit has provided stable housing, job training and parental mentoring to nearly 4,000 pregnant women and mothers under the age of 25. Since Zumdahl came on the scene five years ago, the organization has doubled in size, emphasizing the importance of community support in breaking the cycle of poverty.  
“We found that one of the keys to success, especially for a family in trauma, is to blend all of the supports in one place,” says Zumdahl. “That’s the secret sauce.”
In addition to New Moms’ Transformation Center, which includes 40 apartments, Zumdahl has overseen the construction of a new building that will offer housing for an additional 18 mother-led households. She was also key in expanding the 16-week job-training program at the nonprofit’s social-enterprise candle company, Bright Endeavors.
Zumdahl’s goal at work, and at home with her three teenage stepkids, is to show that the power of mother’s love is immense and that by carving out space for moms to build up their skills, they can overcome challenges and create stronger families.
“There are a lot of people who go to bed and wonder, ‘Did what I do today matter?’” says Zumdahl. “I never think that. I know that it does matter. It’s not just about me — if New Moms wasn’t there, we’d lose generations, and that’s not OK.”

These Arkansas Police Officers Play Wingman to an Elderly Man on a Mission

The hard truth about Alzheimer’s is that the disease can cruelly wipe a patient’s memories away. For Doris Amrine, that’s the exact scenario she faces each day as she slowly loses the person she’s known and loved for more than 60 years: Her husband Melvyn.
But as you can see in the CBS News report below, even if Melvyn can’t remember all the details of their life together, his love for his wife isn’t just about the memories. It’s an instinct.
This past Mother’s Day, unbeknownst to anyone else, the Little Rock, Arkansas man set out on a mission — to buy flowers for his wife, something he’s done every year since Doris gave birth to their first child. When his family noticed he was missing, they called the police. The officers soon found him wandering two miles from home.
MORE: Meet a Couple Whose Service to Veterans Will Make You Smile
Even though he requires assistance to walk, Melvyn was “adamant” about buying the flowers, Sgt. Brian Grigsby and Officer Troy Dillard said. So instead of taking him home, the officers went beyond the call of duty and took him to a store to purchase a bouquet. One officer even covered the difference when Melvyn came up short at the cash register.
“We had to get them,” Grigsby told CBS. “I didn’t have a choice.”
The incredible gesture clearly made the desired impact. “When I saw him waking up with those flowers in hand, it just about broke my heart because I thought ‘Oh he went there to get me flowers because he loves me,'” Doris said.
This longtime couple proves that loves conquers all.
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Why Do We Celebrate Mother’s Day? 9 Heartwarming Reminders

1. The Military Mom Helping Veterans Make a Transition to Civilian Life

WHO: Eva Secchiari
HOW SHE DOES IT: After growing up in a military family, Eva Secchiari understood all too well how stressful deployments can be for soldiers and their loved ones. But seeing her own son struggle with anxiety after his return from combat in Afghanistan in 2012 prompted the Nevada mother to do something. That year, Secchiari founded Life After Active Duty (LAAD), a nonprofit that helps returning veterans readjust to civilian life. The group’s primary initiative, called LAAD Life Enhancement Program, is an eight-week immersion course that trains veterans on basic coping and communication tactics, employment opportunities and other leadership skills. The pilot run launched in December 2013 with 30 participants, but Secchiari told the Las Vegas Review-Journal she’s already thinking bigger. “I see it going nationwide,” she said. “We have 330,000 veterans here [in Nevada], so if we start building that foundation, then we can start expanding outside the state of Nevada. It needs to happen.”
HOW YOU CAN HELP: Volunteer as a program mentor or offer financial support here.

2. The Safety Activist Turning Her Heartbreak Into Hope

WHO: Alison Rhodes Jacobson
HOW SHE DOES IT: After Alison Rhodes Jacobson lost her first son, Connor, to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome in 1997, she quit her executive gig in public relations and started Safety Mom, a consulting company dedicated to child safety. Its website offers families tips on everything from baby-proofing the house and bullying to disease prevention and nutrition. Now Rhodes Jacobson also gives advice on living with disabilities — subject matter she became familiar with after she learned her second son had a learning disability and her husband was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. In 2013, she formed Accessible Home Living, a company that provides disability remodeling and handicap installations for the home. The Connecticut mom has been an equally tireless crusader for children’s safety in the public realm, having testified before Congress in 1998 and campaigned to increase national funding for research dedicated to SIDS, which claims about 4,000 infants a year in the United States.
HOW YOU CAN HELP: Share Safety Mom’s health and wellness tips with friends, family and social networks.

3. The Innovator Making Grocery Shopping Easier for Families With Disabled Kids

WHO: Drew Ann Long
HOW SHE DOES IT: When Drew Ann Long couldn’t find a viable solution to grocery shopping with her special-needs daughter, Caroline, who had grown too big to fit into traditional carts, the Alabama mother decided to create her own. Caroline’s Cart, a specialized shopping cart that combines the convenience of a grocery cart with the space and modifications required of a wheelchair for special-needs children, is Long’s solution to the challenges of navigating a supermarket with a disabled child. Caroline’s Cart features a large seat that’s accessible by rotating handles on the back of the cart, while a harness secures kids, leaving parents’ hands free to shop. “I just saw a very unmet need in the retail world,” Long said. “There are carts for every group out there, but there is nothing for special-needs children.” Caroline’s Carts are in stores in Alabama, Wisconsin and Indiana, and Long hopes to make them available nationwide so families with disabled kids can have better mobility when it’s time to shop.
HOW YOU CAN HELP: Join Caroline’s Cart Facebook page to request the carts in a store near you.

4. The Foster Mom Granting Wishes for Kids in the System

WHO: Danielle Gletow
HOW SHE DOES IT: When Danielle Gletow and her husband began fostering children in their New Jersey home in 2006, they were inspired by the many friends and family members who wanted to help kids in similar situations. (Nearly 400,000 kids lived in foster care in 2011, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.) So in 2008, Gletow started One Simple Wish, a nonprofit that collects “wishes” from nearly 600 organizations that work with foster kids from across the country. One Simple Wish then reviews the requests and posts approved “wishes” online — which range from products like video games to experiences like going on a trip — and anonymous “wish granters” can fulfill them. “These are individual children that have individual wishes and individual personalities and wants and needs and dislikes and likes,” Gletow told CNN. “And I wanted to share those with people so that … they could see that this wasn’t about nearly half a million children that are in foster care. This was about this young man who wanted to go to karate lessons with his friends at school.” To date, One Simple Wish has granted more than 8,500 wishes in more than 40 states.
HOW YOU CAN HELP: Grant a wish.

5. The Vaccine Advocate Spreading the Word

WHO: Duffy Peterson
HOW SHE DOES IT: Duffy Peterson’s decision not to vaccinate her child, at the alleged suggestion of her doctor, is one that’s haunted her for years. In 2001, the Minnesota mother lost her 5-year-old daughter, Abby, after the little girl came down with a serious case of chicken pox — one that made her body too weak to fight off the pneumonia that she caught at the same time. Abby died in Peterson’s arms after 10 excruciating hours in the hospital. Duffy Peterson is now one of the loudest champions for childhood vaccinations, having testified before the Minnesota legislature in support of immunizations and worked to pass laws requiring vaccinations for kids. “Not vaccinating is not taking full medical care of your child,” she told ABC News.
HOW YOU CAN HELP: Learn about the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s suggested immunization schedules for children.

6. The Environmentalists Saving Lunchtime by Kissing Plastic Bags Goodbye

WHO: Karen Whorton and Becky Harper
HOW THEY DO IT: Karen Whorton and Becky Harper, moms based in Washington State, got their business idea while performing a task that any parent would be familiar with: preparing their kids’ lunch. Day after day, they found themselves throwing away many plastic sandwich bags. And while cloth napkins and sustainable water bottles were easy to find, there wasn’t a green alternative to wasteful plastic sandwich bags, which typically have one use. (U.S. consumers use about 100 billion plastic bags a day.) To fill this void, Whorton and Harper launched ReUsies, a line of reusable, eco-friendly food bags. Made of 100 percent cotton and lined with leak-resistant nylon, they are free of harmful ingredients like phthalates and bisphenol-A. They’re convenient, too: All ReUsies can be tossed in the dishwasher for quick cleaning. Whorton and Harper started selling their product to fellow moms in their kids’ schools in 2008, and now ReUsies are available in retail stores in 36 states and online at the company’s website.
HOW YOU CAN HELP: Buy a ReUsies bag and go green.

7. The Crusader Helping Veterans Cope With PTSD

WHO: Roxann Abrams
HOW SHE DOES IT: Some 22 veterans kill themselves a day, according to a 2012 Department of Veterans Affairs study. Many of them are among the estimated 20 percent of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who struggle with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). These devastating statistics hit close to home for Roxann Abrams, whose son Randy, a combat solider who served three tours in Iraq, took his own life in 2009. Frustrated by what she considered a lack of attention and treatment for her son by the Army, Abrams founded Operation: I.V., a nonprofit that provides free PTSD treatment for combat veterans. Funded by corporate and individual donations, the group also helps to educate families and friends of combat veterans on PTSD and works to improve the transition process from combat to civilian life. “The best way I can honor my son is to help his brothers,” Roxann Abrams writes on Operation: I.V.’s website.
HOW YOU CAN HELP: Donate to Operation: I.V.

8. The Underdog Mom Helping Kids Dance to Success

WHO: Tawanda Jones
HOW SHE DOES IT: The challenges that Camden, N.J., students face is a matter of empirical research. Roughly 90 percent of the city’s public schools are in the bottom 5 percent of the state’s schools based on performance, while only 49 percent of students graduate high school, according to the New Jersey Department of Education. But one local mother has found an innovative way to help turn those statistics around — and help kids stay off the street and active in the process. Tawanda Jones founded the nonprofit Camden Sophisticated Sisters Drill Team in 1986 as a way to motivate young girls to succeed in school by using the disciple principles of a drill team. Over the last 28 years, the program has served more than 4,000 girls, all of whom have graduated high school and 80 percent of whom have gone on to vocational schools or traditional four-year colleges.
Jones, who was a teenage mother, was inspired to create the program after seeing how solid family support and hard work helped her succeed, compared with many of her peers who found themselves pregnant, too. “I saw that a lot of girls didn’t have any of that, and I wanted to help,” she told CNN. Today, the nonprofit has grown to include boys and a drum line program; its drill team has also received national acclaim after a performance on ABC’s popular series, “Dancing With the Stars.”
HOW YOU CAN HELP: Volunteer with underserved kids or donate to cover operational costs.

9. The Entrepreneur Championing Compassion Through Education Reform

WHO: Jan Helson
HOW SHE DOES IT: A lifelong businesswoman and philanthropist, Kentucky mother Jan Helson taught her kids at an early age the importance of both business savvy and a passion for giving back. It’s no wonder, then, that when her daughter Rachel learned that another one of her aunts (making it four) had been diagnosed with breast cancer, the aspiring actress staged a local performance of “The Rocky Horror Show” to raise money for breast cancer research. Rachel, then 15, raised a whopping $12,000 and eventually went on to produce the play as a one-night benefit on Broadway in 2007.
For Jan Helson, the experience confirmed her long-held belief that encouraging a child’s true interests holds the key to professional and personal success. Today, she’s spreading that message through the Global Game Changers, an educational nonprofit she founded with Rachel in 2011. GGC offers after-school programs through local organizations like the YMCA, summer camps and a Common Core-compliant curriculum that encourages kids to pair their passions with their talents to unleash their “superpower” to change the world. “We believe that it’s important for kids to find the educational aspects of what they’re learning to be fun and engaging and something that’s relatable,” Jan Helson told NationSwell. “By using the equation — my talent plus my heart equals my superpower — the goal is to show them that giving back is part of who they are and not just something that they do.”
HOW YOU CAN HELP: Sponsor a child for a Global Game Changers workshop here.

Let’s Do Something For the Holders of the World’s Toughest Job

Last week, a video about the “World’s Toughest Job” made a big splash on the Internet. For anyone who hasn’t seen it yet, a fake company called “Rethom” (read it backwards) posted a job listing for a “Director of Operations” position that had some pretty insane requirements:
– Must be able to work 135+ hours a week
– Willingness to forgo any breaks
– Work mostly standing up and/or bending down
– Demonstrate knowledge and experience in negotiating, counseling and culinary arts
– Have an understanding of finance
– Have an understanding of medicine
– Maintain a positive disposition at all times
The position is unpaid, you will be on call 24/7 — and the work will actually increase during the holidays. As Adweek writes, the ad for this position got 2.7 million impressions from paid ad placements, and 24 real-life people actually inquired about this job. On the day of their interview, they got dressed up, were told about the requirements from this job from you know where, and all their reactions were caught on video (which has gone viral in the few short days it’s been out and blogs have applauded it as a tearjerker and amazing). Of course, there’s a big emotional twist.
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Turns out (if you haven’t already guessed or watched the video, which was created by Boston ad company Mullen for the greeting card company Cardstore.com just in time for Mother’s Day next month) there are billions of people around the world who already have this grueling job. (Spoiler alert!) They’re mothers.
MORE: Are Cars the Key to Single Mothers Achieving Self-Sufficiency?
Critics, however, have attacked the video for being schmaltzy or sidelining the dads who take on this role. Point taken, but perhaps the video struck a chord because it highlights the oft-ignored and thankless labor that women go through.
There are an estimated 85.4 million mothers in the United States, not to mention the millions of fathers and caregivers who also hold this position. Maybe instead of buying a greeting card or just forwarding the link of the video with the message, “I love you, mommy,” we should also do something that would really show how much they are appreciated?
Since mothers work 135+ hours a week, how about improving access and affordability of daycare centers or after school programs?
ALSO: Here’s Why We Should Be Investing in Single Moms
Since there’s no vacation, what about increasing maternity leave? American moms take off about 10 weeks on average after giving birth compared to 52 weeks in the United Kingdom.
Since moms need to be medical, culinary and financial experts, what about making sure they actually have the means to keep their families healthy? We’re talking access to adequate health care and leaving welfare, food stamps and WIC programs untouched.
Since the job of motherhood goes unpaid, what about increasing the pay of their day job (or jobs) or closing the wage gap? It’s still 77 cents to every dollar a man earns. For all the talk about “Leaning In,” what about actively promoting more women to top jobs? Maybe then, women could really have it all.