Team Beauty Night Visits Surrey, New West and Burnaby Monthly

On Feb 5th, we begin our monthly Surrey events. Thanks to a partnership with Maxxine Wright, we are able to start offering monthly programming for low income women in Surrey. “In the past 18 months, we have found out many of our participants in the programs we offer in Vancouver’s DTES reside in Burnaby, Surrey and New West. Starting February 2013, we will be offering 1 night of programming each month in each city (Surrey, New West and Burnaby). At our last volunteer meeting in Surrey, our Team Beauty Night members agreed that we would see if we can increase our programming to twice a month after 3 months, three times a month at nine months and 4 times a month within a year. This would be based on developing the resources - volunteer base, donations and community support within each community we offer our services in. Already we have a wait list of community partners who would like to see our programming at their facilities,” explained Beauty Night Founder, Caroline MacGillivray.

 

If you are interested in joining Team Beauty Night for our events in Surrey, New West or Burnaby, we have a volunteer orientation set up for Sunday, February 17th.

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We are looking for dedicated volunteers who can commit to one three hour shift on the first Wednesday of the month. Volunteers must be responsible, self starters, and comfortable working in a Team environment.

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We are looking for wellness, health care, and beauty professionals and students who maybe interested in joining Team Beauty Night.

Sunday, February 17th

12pm -2:30pm

13733 92nd Ave (King George Hwy and 92nd ave)

Surrey, BC

Please fill in the volunteer application form on our website.

* Orientation is mandatory before volunteering for one of our front line Beauty Night events.

Smell This Aromatherapy Visits Beauty Night

Every month our friends from Smell This visit our Beauty Night ladies. They set up a scent bar. For those who have never been to a scent bar, this is an opportunity to create your own “pure” fume. Smell This brings the essential oils and you are able to create your own scent.

Every month, they visit our Beauty Night ladies. One of my favourite sights is seeing the ladies naming their “pure” fumes. As they sit around the round tables and decide which scents they love the most, they share names. “My Own Creation”, “Heavenly”, and “Tyla” are some of the names of “pure” fumes they created.

While the Scent Bar is in session, our Team Beauty Night volunteers are offering services. Hair cuts, foot care, manicures, mini facials, brow shaping and relaxation massage are some of the services offered by our volunteers. The conversations, the laughter and friendships that blossom during our events are the threads that build the tapestry of our community.

If you would like to join Team Beauty Night, our next volunteer orientations are:

January 27 in Surrey

February 5th in Vancouver

 

Knitting and Team Work at Beauty Night

At Beauty Night, we build build self esteem and change lives for women and youth living in poverty. Some of the stories that don’t always get shared are how lives are changed though the relationships we make through our beauty night community. Here is a beautiful story from volunteer, Mira Thomas about knitting, friendship and learning skills through Beauty Night.

Volunteer, Mira Thomas and Mama Elise Show the Blanket they Knitted Together

I met Mama Elsie a few months ago when I came to First United with Beauty Night Society on one of our outreach nights. I noticed her that day quietly knitting at the corner of a church pew, expertly twisting her needles and moving the thread out of the way as she created a beautiful winter coat for a baby. I was intrigued… how was she managing to do that so fast? As an amateur, when I knit, I usually need intense levels of concentration just to make sure I get each stitch right. Most people can’t even talk to me once I start my work. But here she was, an expert at the trade, effortlessly stitching together beautiful pieces of clothing and talking to people without losing a beat, and I wanted to learn all her secrets. So I approached her and started to chat with her; in fact her work was even more impeccable up close.

 

At the end of our conversation I finally got up the courage to tell her that I had recently started teaching myself to knit. I told her how I was working on a scarf for my sister, attempting to have it done in time for Christmas. I explained to her my struggles with it; how I kept undoing parts of the scarf to correct the numerous mistakes I had made. She told me not to give up, and that she too would often undo lengths of a scarf she was working on, and start again if there was a mistake. She assured me it was part of the process.

“You’ll get better as you keep working on it!” she said.

 

It was December, about two weeks before Christmas when I finally finished my scarf. I found myself at First United once again helping out with our wonderful Beauty Night volunteers. Mama Elsie was sitting in her usual spot in the corner observing all the fun, busy with a new project in her hands; this time sewing slippers together. Naturally, I went over to admire them. She had done a fantastic job! She told me people put in orders for the slippers and once she’s done she would sell it to them. I told her how I finally finished my scarf! “Oh that’s wonderful!” she exclaimed. I laughed, and told her I was surprised I managed to finish it before Christmas. She reached into her carrier and pulled out a plastic bag, handing it to me. I peeked inside the bag to find two neat piles of pink and white knitted squares.

“Wow, these are beautiful.” I said.

“I have these squares but I’m going to be too busy to put them together. You can take em’ home and make a baby blanket out of them.”

“Oh me? No, no I couldn’t. I have no idea how to even begin making one.”

She waved her hands n’ shook her head, “No, no it’s easy! You just have to sew them together straight down the lines. You could do it! You can make a blanket!”

I looked at her, trying to read her face. Was she joking? … Why did she believe in me so much? All I had done was complete a scarf! That hardly made me qualified. I stared down at the squares in the bag, (30 white and 30 pink) perfectly stacked in two columns.

“Alright Mama Elsie” I promised, “I’ll do what I can.”

And with that I was the proud new owner of two stacks of squares, beautifully knitted, but unattached.

 

Over the next few weeks, I consulted anyone and everyone who knew anything about knitting, crocheting or sewing. I visited the local crafts store and the kind ladies there helped me get all set up with the right needles. I poured over countless videos online trying to decide the best way to put this blanket together. I borrowed a tapestry needle from one of my aunts and started lining up the squares; carefully stitching them together. Any free time I had during the day would be allotted to crocheting borders or attaching squares. At long last, I had completed the blanket. I spread it out on the bed and took a look at it. Not too bad for a first try. I couldn’t wait to give it back to Mama Elsie.

 

The next night at First United, I looked around for Mama Elsie hoping I’d see her. She was nowhere to be found. Soon the volunteers got to work, talking to the ladies, sharing stories and laughing about many things. I had just finished with a participant when I looked up and saw Mama Elsie sitting asleep in one of the chairs in the corner. I brought the blanket with me and crouched down beside her chair.

“Mama Elsie?” I asked, “Do you remember this?”

I opened out the completed blanket and placed it across her lap. Suddenly I felt shy and a bit nervous. What if she had forgotten? Or what if she thought it wasn’t that great, or maybe, she thought it was hideous and didn’t want it at all!

As she felt the blanket, her face lit up and she exclaimed, “Oh wow! Look at how beautiful this is!” She ran her fingers along the stitches inspecting the ridges. “You did a great job! It looks wonderful!”

I was beaming. I couldn’t believe she said it was good!

“Well, it’s for you” I said, “Thank you so much for letting me put these squares together. I enjoyed working on it!”

She paused and looked down at the blanket.

“You know, I have a friend who just had a baby girl, and I haven’t had time to make anything for her yet. I could give her this blanket.”

I smiled. “I think that would be a great idea.”

As I wrapped up the blanket and placed it gently inside the bag for her, I thought about how a small, tiny, baby would soon find comfort and warmth in a few squares brought together by an expert and a beginner.

Change Your Life Through Volunteering

If you want to become a volunteer, our next orientation is Tuesday, September 4th. 5pm at 1455 West 10th Avenue. We would love to see you there. Here is past volunteer Lauren Kiljur’s thank you letter to us before she left to go traveling.

Lauren Kiljur:

“I am just writing to thank you for my experience at Beauty Night these last seven months. The evolution from a more ‘standard’ yoga practice to more of a movement dance flow was a wonderful adaptation and gave me the opportunity to connect with the ladies in a fun and very special way. It has been absolutely amazing, this past Monday especially! While sometimes I struggle with being as naturally outgoing as you undoubtedly are, I have a fun spirit inside of me who also thrives on human connection. I can see the dancing has been hugely therapeutic (for myself included) and I see many similarities with yoga. It allows us to connect with our bodies and express ourselves without words or even thoughts. The dancing has the added benefit of laughter and allowing our inner “goof-balls” to come forward, which lightens the spirit and heals the wounded child in all of us.

What She Learned

I have also learned that above all BN offers a wonderful safe community space for women to simply be together, and for privileged people like myself to connect with people from very different backgrounds on a basic human level. I realize now that it is not really about the services, but about connecting with familiar faces in a warm and inviting environment that allows the women to come as true equals, by their own initiative, on their own terms and with dignity, rather than as slightly ‘less than’ people as many services in the DTES can unintentionally convey.


 

Wellness Day on April 30th Benefits Beauty Night

Vancouver, B.C. – April 16, 2012 – Connect Health, an integrative medicine clinic that combines conventional medicine and complementary approaches, is hosting a fundraiser to help bring awareness to women and youth living in poverty. On Monday, April 30, 2012 all the practitioners will donate 100 percent of the proceeds of their services to Beauty Night Society. Beauty Night is a non-profit society that provides makeovers, life skills programming, and wellness services to marginalized women.

Beauty Night is the brainchild of Caroline MacGillivray, who began the organization after an experience she had volunteering at a women’s shelter. Since 2000, Beauty Night has given over 16,000 life-makeovers thanks to 500 volunteers. “We believe that everyone deserves to be treated with dignity and respect. Regardless of socio-economic status, no one deserves to be invisible and isolated from community. We are thrilled to be the charity of choice for Connect Health’s wellness day. The monies raised will allow us to continue to meet the growing need of women and youth living in poverty,” noted Caroline. Dr. Melissa Carr, a Traditional Chinese Medicine doctor who works at Connect Health, has been looking forward to collaborating with Caroline. Dr. Carr stated, “Caroline is extremely dedicated to this project and our clinic is very pleased to be a part of such an important cause.”

Services being donated for the event include acupuncture, biopuncture, MD integrative consultations, nutrition consultations, counseling sessions, mind-body therapy sessions, fitness assessments, and more. Several local businesses have also donated prizes for attendees.

For additional information about the upcoming event, please visit: www.connecthealthcare.ca.

Connect Health’s aim is to provide effective whole person care by offering a collaborative and personalized combination of conventional medicine and complementary approaches. They are working to evolve the healthcare system by becoming leaders in clinical care, education, community outreach and research in the field of integrative medicine.

 

 

Name: Connect Health

Attention: Dr. Melissa Carr

Tel: 604-733-4400

Email: [email protected]

Web: www.connecthealthcare.ca

Name: Beauty Night

Attention: Caroline MacGillivray

Tel: 778-885-4526

Email: [email protected]

Web: www.beautynight.org