Well my first mistake was bad timing. I missed the 12 noon show so I decided to make the 2pm show. I took my two toddlers without making them have their nap first. Disaster!!! We parked blocks away and took the subway the rest of the way which was fun for them, their first time on a train. We walked through city hall to Macys. Macy's was sooooo crowded and we did not get their early enough to get a good spot. Then my toddlers had to go potty which was across the store and on the third floor. So one toddler missed the light show all together. I was kind of disappointed with the show anyway. After the 10 min light show they started getting cranky which I couldn't blame them because I should have known better. We didn't get to go through the Dickens Village because the line was crazy and the kids were cranky :( so lesson learned. Nap first, full belly, and get there Early!!!!!! I will definitely try again next year.
Working single mother, Veteran, sister, friend....a few of my many roles. How do I juggle it all and succeed? https://www.facebook.com/enlistedmom enlistedmom@gmail.com
Saturday, December 27, 2014
Monday, December 22, 2014
Great Story and Shout out to the Pottstown Home Depot and Vets for Vets of Pennsburg PA
And give back they did.
Home Depot, Vets for Vets, team
up to fix up wounded Pottstown veteran’s house POTTSTOWN MERCURY WWW.POTTSMERC.COM
A smiling
Michele Labant watches as Home Depot employees get to work doing renovation
work to her Pottstown home. Labant was injured while deployed in Afghanistan
with the Pa. Army National Guard. John Strickler — The Mercury
By Mercury
Staff
Employees from Home Depot along with Vets for Vets and
Pottstown VFW 780 stand together with Pa. Army National Guard veteran Michele
Labant before getting started doing renovation work to her Pottstown home. Michele
Labant has owned her Cherry Street home for about 10 years.But with deployments
in Iraq and Afghanistan, she estimates she may only have spent about four years
actually living there. As a result, maintenance has been an issue. Those issues multiplied in July, 2011, when the armored truck Labant was driving
in northern Afghanistan was hit by an explosive device. Three
soldiers were killed and five injured, including Labant, in the explosion.
A civilian
processor for the Pottstown Police Department, Labant suffers from traumatic
brain injury, a herniated disc, and back problems that “go down into my left
hip.”And
that’s where Home Depot comes in. As
part of a recent push to have its “Team Depot” projects focus on helping
veterans, $15,000 worth of work was recently undertaken at Labant’s home.
“We help whenever we can in the community,”
Morrotto said, “but this project was special.”
She explained
that while stores in the chain regularly undertake quarterly community service
projects, the corporation recently “challenged us to find ways to give back to
veterans.”
And give back they did.
Rather, that
work was done by volunteers from Vets for Vets, a two-year-old Pennsburg-based
non-profit organization founded by Jake Leone that works as a local network to
connect vets who come with whatever they need.
“We help
veterans coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan who need help finding housing, a
job, getting new training or who come home to a divorce, or get into trouble
with alcohol or other substances,” said Leone, who himself just transferred
from the Army Reserve to the Air National Guard.
“We just ask
the vets to perform some community service in return,” he explained.
Leone said his
organization, which has no paid staff, found out about Home Depot’s efforts
when a different store hung some blinds at the renovated post office which
serves as the group’s headquarters and temporary housing for veterans without.
“We knew
Michele needed work done because she helped us out by giving us an old Ford
Probe she had for a vet who needed a car,” said Leone. “That’s how we got
plugged in to her.”
“We have a web
site — www.soldertocivilian.org — where we sell hats and
shirts to raise money and we could handle maybe $1,000, but $15,000 was a
little more than we could muster,” Leone said with a laugh.
So he put
Labant in touch with Home Depot and, after a bit of paperwork, things worked
out.
“We couldn’t
handle what her house needed but because we’re networked with Home Depot, I
know about this push to give back to veterans,” said Leone, “and obviously,
Michelle has given enough.”
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