Friday, April 30, 2010

Uh oh...

And still they didn't send out! Hmmmm... I think some more technical help is needed... Ah. Here we have the problem:
It's in a format the computer doesn't understand!

Our New Logos



These are our new logos, and mottoes. Hope you like them!

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Hmmmm... Our logo didn't seem to send. I guess we'll re-send it tomorrow.

Pay It Forward Day, and More Announcements

Today, at twelve o'clock PM, Pay It Forward Day started. The whole idea of Pay-It-Forward is to do an (anonymous!) favor for someone without expecting anything return, such as cleaning up your teacher's classroom without her asking in her lunch hour. Even if it's not Pay-It-Forward day, you can still help out someone anonymously, and the world will be six-billion more times happier.

We have another announcement to make! We now have our motto(es). They are as follows: "Recycle Our Happiness" and "Who's to Thank?". We also have a couple of logos, and they will be posted shortly.

Signing out,
Emily and Skylar

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Welcome to Anonymous Favors!

This site is for people who have ever found a random act of kindness, maybe a plate of cookies by their door, or a bag of clothes by the late-night St. Vincent DePaul drop-off. People can send us stories of their experiences (Either giving or receiving) by posting on the comments, though remember - NEVER leave your name. Read an example story that actually happened to someone we know right here.

I had a bag of my 6-year-old daughter's clothes that I needed to get rid of. I put them on one of my friend's porches, but I was too lazy to put a note that said who it was from on it. Later on, as I was Facebook-ing that evening, I saw my friend's post: "Who was the clothes fairy who dropped off the clothes? It was like Christmas for Ruby!"

Signed, Anonymous

Giving is always better that receiving, as The Quiltmaker's Gift says:
(Speaking about the king)"Frowning, he finally came out with a single marble. But the boy who received it smiled so brightly in return, the king went back for more things."
-The Quiltmaker's Gift, by Jeff Brumbeau and Gail de Marcken