I don’t know if people know how easy it is to make a really big difference. Here’s some of the ways your donations help. And if that’s not enough to get you to visit my AIDS Walk Austin page, below the orange fleur de lis, I pull out the big guns — stories about the people who have been helped.
$35 covers one rapid HIV rest – we know that 40% of HIV+ people don’t know it yet. Through testing, we can get them into life saving care, and further reduce the spread of the virus.
$60 pays for a one month supply of medical prescriptions. Medications can reduce the virus so much that it keeps someone healthy and also reduces the risk of passing it along.
$120 provides education for 440 people. Education is one of the most important tools in reducing new infections.
$250 provides 3 family counseling sessions. It can be devastating for a family when a member is diagnosed, and we know that an intact family unit promotes health and provides a built in support.
$500 provides a month of rent for one family in supportive housing. Assistance with food, daily chores, trips to medical appointments and social support create a foundation for continued health and a step toward independence.
$1,000 gives 450 home cooked meals for hospice patients. When in hospice, there are often unique food needs. You can make sure that final days are spent with delicious food that doesn’t upset someone’s stomach.
So those are the wonderful things that your donations to AIDS Walk Austin can do. I know that cash is hard to come by these days & everyone is asking for some. Well, so am I. Please donate if you can, here’s my AIDS Walk Austin page.
Marie T. Freeman
If you’re too busy to give your neighbor a helping hand, then you’re just too darned busy.
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Sam is 50 years old and has been living with AIDS for over 16 years, receiving assistance from AIDS Services of Austin periodically for ten years. There she has found a connection with others who have the same needs. She has an outlet to give back by exchanging her story and encouraging others to live in a positive way. The help she has received through ASA’s Food Bank and the Medical Nutrition Therapy program has truly transformed her life.
Sam became a success story because of YOU who have donated. There are thousands more who need you too, and the numbers keep rising.
and you can help by donating at
my AIDS Walk Austin page
Helen Keller
Believe, when you are most unhappy, that there is something for you to do in the world. So long as you can sweeten another’s pain, life is not in vain.
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Maria is 27 years old. She had been positive for several years when she discovered she was pregnant. She moved into Roosevelt Gardens, where she had a nice place to call home with rent she could afford. With the support of Project Transitions’ HIV Services and the David Powell Health Center, she had a healthy pregnancy and her baby boy was born healthy and HIV negative. Now she is back at work, and thanks to you has the resources and support she needs to care for her son.
We want to keep people like Maria healthy. People with AIDS deal with so many other illnesses that exacerbate each other and the agencies we fund address the full care continuum. Staying healthy pre-empts expensive illnesses that make people miss work or lose their jobs – it keeps people going. For every $100 spent on keeping people healthy and on their health care, we save $1,000 on expensive emergency room visits. It just makes sense not just for our hearts, but also for the whole community.
Woodrow Wilson
There is no higher religion than human service. To work for the common good is the greatest creed.
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Project Transitions
Project Transitions is dedicated to providing hospice, housing and support to people affected by HIV/AIDS in a compassionate and caring environment. Its hospice, Doug’s House, is the only facility in central Texas dedicated to in-house medical care for patients with AIDS and AIDS-related complications. Project Transitions also provides affordable, transitional housing with supportive services for individuals and families affected by HIV through three housing programs: Roosevelt Gardens, Highland Terrace and Community Housing. These programs are partially supported by the proceeds from its thrift store, Top Drawer, which has been open since 1993. Project Transitions’ goal is to help transition the homeless by providing support to gain the life-skills needed to live independently, and then move into long-term, affordable housing of their own. projecttransitions.org
they are one of the beneficiary agencies, you can help them by donating at
my AIDS Walk Austin page
Bob Hope
If you haven’t any charity in your heart, you have the worst kind of heart trouble.
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The Wright House Wellness Center
Since 1988, The Wright House Wellness Center has offered care and compassion to Central Texans affected by or at risk of HIV and other chronic illnesses. Wright House provides resources for support, education and empowerment. Services include: HIV/Hepatitis C testing, education and prevention programming, HIV/Hepatitis C case management, HIV food bank and nutrition services, HIV mental health services, and complementary health therapies (acupuncture, massage therapy and yoga) for persons affected by HIV and/or Hepatitis C. thewrighthouse.org
my favorite quote about helping:
Anne Frank
How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.
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and yeah, I know you’ve seem this video, but I’m gonna make you cry again:
please donate at my AIDS Walk Austin page
Flora Edwards
In helping others, we shall help ourselves, for whatever good we give out completes the circle and comes back to us.
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Friends of David Powell Health CenterThrough the Friends of David Powell Health Center, money raised helps support the only public clinic in Austin specializing in medical care for persons with HIV and AIDS. The Clinic provides primary care, medical case management, immunizations, nutritional counseling and health education services to uninsured and underinsured patients in all stages of HIV infection. fodpc.org
Dr. Loretta Scott
We can’t help everyone, but everyone can help someone.
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Please donate if you can, here’s my AIDS Walk Austin page.
Coming up before the Walk – this Monday & Tuesday, actually, is Dining for Life, where restaurants are donating part of their evening’s take to AIDS Services of Austin. So, Austin Kossacks – I’m hosting at Mother’s, but if that’s not convenient, there’s a bunch of restaurants. Here’s a list of restaurants – and it lists for both Monday & Tuesday: http://www.asaustin.org/site/P… But you want to come eat with me on Monday, right? So here’s info on Mother’s: http://motherscafeaustin.com/. I’ll get there around 6 & stay till it looks like most of my friends who are coming have done so.
and here’s me, talking about why I walk:
and it’s Friday, I’m me and…… the goal is Elevation
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