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Hello, my name is Chris Krehmeyer, President and CEO of Beyond Housing and your host for New Kid on the Blog.  This blog is provided as a community service to educate, enlighten and empower people concerning housing, the foreclosure crisis, community development, poverty and any other topic relevant to the mission of Beyond Housing.  Beyond Housing reserves the right to approve any comment posted in response to my blogs and will not post any comment that contains offensive or suggestive language.  To paraphrase Dr. Martin Luther King, we can disagree without being disagreeable.  I am looking forward to exchanging ideas with you.

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Aug 24

Written by: Chris Krehmeyer
8/24/2009 12:55 PM 

In small and large ways, being there for children can truly make a difference.

On Saturday, I was reminded, in two very different ways, of the value of being there for children. I started my day at Normandy High School at 8:30 AM for "Expectation: Graduation – Reach Out to Drop Outs Program". The Normandy School District and community wide event drew over 100 volunteers; including me, and aimed at reaching out to those students who had dropped out of school and see if we can get them back. 
 
We went out in teams with school district staff and community volunteers paired together with the hope of knocking on over 100 doors and getting as many children back in school as possible. I was fortunate to be on a team with Dr. Stanton Lawrence, the Superintendent of the Normandy School District. In the year that Dr. Lawrence has been here in St. Louis from Houston, he has brought energy, enthusiasm and an unwavering commitment to the success of each and every child in the Normandy School District. I have had the privilege of getting to know Stan, convince him to join the board of Beyond Housing and consider him a friend. 
 
At the second home we visited, the sixteen year old young man we hoped to bring back to school answered the door. I wish I could adequately describe the look on his face when Stan introduced himself as the superintendent and said he wanted him to come back to school. This young man saw the leader of the school district and a group of other concerned people come to his house and tells him he matters. A meeting was scheduled for the student and his mother to go to the high school and continue the process of having him get his diploma. Our team made contact with seven out of the eight homes we visited. The students and their families seemed genuinely appreciative of the effort that all the volunteers were giving to lend a hand. We tried to show both the students and their families that we cared and wanted that child to, as a friend of mine recently told me, “build a successful life”. We, especially Stan Lawrence, tried to be there for these children.
 
Later on Saturday, I took my oldest child, Nick, now 20, back to Chicago for his junior year of college. On the way there, we stopped at the Illinois State Fair to see the famous 70’s – 80’s rock band Heart (you know Barracuda, Dreamboat Annie, Crazy on You – work with me). Nick, an audio engineering major at Columbia College, has a wide-ranging taste in music including loving Ann and Nancy Wilson of Heart. We left St. Louis around 6:30PM and headed to Springfield, Illinois for the fair. 
 
Nick is my only child from my first marriage and has lived with me since the divorce when he was three and with my wife, Christine, and our two children, Jackson, 14 and Sophia, 11. Nick and I have always been close by necessity and by choice. I have tried to present in his life at every possible moment. The concert was great – the Wilson sisters can still rock the house. We chose not to go to the livestock portion of the state fair; but, it was good to see that you could buy meat on bun, a plate, a stick and many other tools if you wanted. As we drove to Springfield and later to Chicago, he and I had incredibly expansive conversation about a number of things including abortion, health care, Beyond Housing, his education and his future. I am his father and certainly have my bias; but, I believe my son is fine young man. His future is still unclear; but, what is clear is that he is positioned to do well and build that successful life for himself. It is clear that he had many people in his life that cared for him from my wife, Christine, to his own mother and his grandparents. We all tried to be there for him. I think he will do the same with the people in his life as well.
 
Being there is sometimes a small thing, three and half hours on a Saturday in the Normandy School District and sometimes a big thing, being a parent (I am told it never really ends). I hope we can all be there for children in small and large ways.
 
Chris
 

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2 comment(s) so far...

Re: Being There for Children

Thanks for sharing, Chris. I love this program that Normandy has started. It is so personal and says "we care about YOU, please consider investing in your future". Very impactful.

Also, tell Nick hello for me. My daughter continues to listen to the CD we bought at one of your fundraisers a few years back. He is a talented musician. If he has a new CD, let us know. We will purchase one!

By Sylvan Schulz on   8/27/2009 7:32 AM

Re: Being There for Children

I will pass on your regards to Nick - which CD do you have? He has produced a couple. Thanks

Chris

By Chris Krehmeyer on   8/28/2009 10:44 AM

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