We still have three spaces left on our 10-day tour to Peru!
Join our team of Sojourners in this jungle playground as we zip through the trees, swim with the dolphins and experience ceremonies by native shamans.
June 11-20, 2009k
$2445.00 USD
Call 651.493.8817 to reserve your space.
Monday, May 4, 2009
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
PIF Tour Leader in the News
PIF Tour Leader, Christian Gilbert, recently returned from climbing Aconcagua in Argentina, South America. Christian is an 8th grade Geography teacher in Waconia and accomplished this challenge with a colleague of his. The two set out to involve their students in the adventure by creatively informing them of each days discoveries. To read more about their experience, visit:
http://wcco.com/education/teachers.andes.mountain.2.900661.html
Christian will be an assistant Tour Leader on PLAY it Forward's Kilimanjaro trip August 8-23. Join us for this exciting adventure!
http://wcco.com/education/teachers.andes.mountain.2.900661.html
Christian will be an assistant Tour Leader on PLAY it Forward's Kilimanjaro trip August 8-23. Join us for this exciting adventure!
Friday, January 9, 2009
The Sincerity of Rotarians
"Improving quality of life locally and globally" is the vision of Rotary Club that hung on a banner at this morning's Rotary meeting. The vision of PIF runs parallel to this as we seek to "Improve quality of life across the globe." Giving presentations to local Rotary and Rotaract Clubs is the goal of PIF Adventures this month in an effort to get the word out to these socially conscious individuals.
I've spoken at two Rotary meetings this week, the first in Shoreview and the second in Maplewood. The thing that resonates most is the kindness of these people. Every individual greets me, makes me feel welcome, asks about PIFA with genuine interest, and makes sure I have everything I need to successfully give my presentation. They recognize their guests and invite them to eat first. Random individuals sat down and ate with me, striking up friendly conversation. It may seem like a formality, but the sincerity of it is what strikes me. Rotarians are sincerely good people.
For all Rotarians reading this blog, I say thank you for your support of PIF Adventures and keep up the good work in your community.
I've spoken at two Rotary meetings this week, the first in Shoreview and the second in Maplewood. The thing that resonates most is the kindness of these people. Every individual greets me, makes me feel welcome, asks about PIFA with genuine interest, and makes sure I have everything I need to successfully give my presentation. They recognize their guests and invite them to eat first. Random individuals sat down and ate with me, striking up friendly conversation. It may seem like a formality, but the sincerity of it is what strikes me. Rotarians are sincerely good people.
For all Rotarians reading this blog, I say thank you for your support of PIF Adventures and keep up the good work in your community.
Sharing & Caring Hands
Last night a group of eight served dinner at Sharing and Caring Hands in downtown Minneapolis. Established in 1985 by Mary Jo Copeland, this privately owned organization is dedicated to the proposition that the community can make a difference in the lives of others through volunteerism, donation and commitment. Every year, the donations of goods, services, time and money by thousands of people allow Sharing and Caring Hands to make a difference in the lives of individuals, families, and children in need.
After serving dinner to over 100 individuals and families in need, our group took a tour of Mary Jo's Place. This is a complex currently housing 93 families as they get back on their feet. Every Thursday Mary Jo throws a get-together for kids in the lobby where they play music, socialize and Mary Jo gives them each $2. She'll asks every kid in the complex what they want to be when they grow up.
As a finale to our experience, we stopped at Namaste Cafe in Uptown for some chai and conversation.
After serving dinner to over 100 individuals and families in need, our group took a tour of Mary Jo's Place. This is a complex currently housing 93 families as they get back on their feet. Every Thursday Mary Jo throws a get-together for kids in the lobby where they play music, socialize and Mary Jo gives them each $2. She'll asks every kid in the complex what they want to be when they grow up.
As a finale to our experience, we stopped at Namaste Cafe in Uptown for some chai and conversation.
Friday, December 19, 2008
Holidazzle Parade & Emergency Foodshelf Network
The 2008 Holidazzle Parade was in full swing tonight as hundreds of onlookers lined the streets of Minneapolis. The holiday spirit brings out the best in people as they bundle their families in snow pants, hats and mittens to enjoy this annual tradition.
Ameriprise Financial provides volunteers each night to support the Emergency Foodshelf Network by encouraging monetary and food donations. Tonight four Sojourners volunteered to be in the parade and experience holiday gift giving from inside pinstriped overhauls.
Nathan Worrell, an Ameriprise employee and PLAY it Forward "favorite", was the mastermind behind this experience. His wife, Kacie, looking ever so glamorous in her stylish winter b
Foodshelf Facts:
* 56% of foodshelf visits are made by families with children
* the number of families visiting local foodshelves in the metro area has increased 20-30% in the last year
For every dollar and pound of food donated, Ameriprise Financial matched the donation up to $20,000!
Make a cash or food donation by contacting the Emergency Foodshelf Network.
www.emergencyfoodshelf.org
Be the Change You Want to See In the World
I think a pretty smart and inspired person once said something like this.... "be the change you want to see in the world."
In Guatemala, Jodi challenged us with daily insights....
BE PRESENT will forever be etched in my memory, and may it also be a constant reminder to listen, not only to others, but to nature and ourselves.
To REFLECT was for me a difficult challenge at a time when all I wanted was to give of myself, to be active, and to seize the day.
Where do you look when you're walking? It seems like some days I'm trudging through the day, navigating cracks in the sidewalk. Other days, my head is in the clouds. To BE PRESENT and REFLECT are two challenges that have stuck with me.
Question: How do you STAY PRESENT and REFLECT daily?
Life is a game. PLAY it Forward . You're it! :-p
Justin Fleming
Sojourner
Guatemala Fall 2008
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Leave Your Mascara At Home

Leave your mascara at home boys and girls, PLAY it Forward is not for pretty boys although we had several on our sweet trip.
I looked most enticing with my fingernails caked with grit and my hair coiffed in the sweat shaped squashed down style of my purple bandana. I would have had to search for a mirror to see this but I didn't because there were too many other really cool things to see and do. Possibilities for that include riding your trusty mountain bike with the necessary shock absorbers down a rain slick mountain path or man-handling your kayak over the beautiful Lake..... as the waves slap you across the face and soak your brand new water resistant gear. Give up your worries, it is time for fun.
And fun it was, whether we were carrying heavy panels up the mountain to build a house for a hard working family or my first shot of tequila, salt and lime. (Loved the tequila but go easy on the lime.)
You will find yourself reflecting on the great issues of poverty, fairness, equality and the like unless you are made of stone and if you are made of stone you must take this trip. Tough veneer crumbles pretty easily when you need to sprint to the hole in the ground toilet with an audience of fellow sufferers. Connection with the big wide world happens naturally when after two days of hefting, hammering, measuring and mitering you present a new house to a family of five. They thank you in Spanish seventeen different ways and you "Ah shucks it was nothing" right back at 'em, but it was something, it is something to have a home that keeps you out of rain, home that lifts you from the muddy floor at night, a place to be safe, place to be proud of.
So contemplate all of that while hiking a steamy path through the forest and watch young girls in native dress chop firewood with a machete and boys fly kites made of black plastic bags and women wash clothes in the town square and men carry fifty pound bags of cement on their backs two miles up a rocky path.
Look inward, act outward, play hard, laugh mightily. You deserve it. You owe it to yourself to find your strength after a physically exhausting day, to use your wisdom while bartering in the market and while trying your wobbly Spanish.
You must experience this. Afterward you will feel deep gratitude for your life. You will cherish the gods who created health insurance and inhalers for asthma and a stove that doesn't blow smoke into your lungs. You will feel joy listening to your tour guide Juan play his drums and croon a sexy Led Zepplin tune at Cafe NoSe late in the evening. You will be ravenous after a day of play and devour plantains and beans and rice, tasty spicy sandwiches on pillowy bread from the market and delicious coffee and if you play your cards right a shot of mezcal.
Try PLAY it Forward - Guatemala. Because don't you want more at the end of the day to reflect on than your own pretty face in the mirror. Don't you want it all?
Linda Kantner
Sojourner Fall 2008
Guatemala
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