What inspired you to start your stuffed animal drive?

When I was in the National Junior Honor Society, we had to do an independent service drive for a project. I started thinking about what in my life had made a big impact on me. [What] came to my mind was when my family moved here from Arizona. I was four years old. I lost my favorite stuffed animal [at] the grocery store. And I was absolutely distraught. I couldnโ€™t sleep. My neighbor, who was 13 or 14, gave me one of her stuffed dogs to replace mine, because she saw a little kid crying who was terrified by a new house, a new neighborhood, new people. That one kind gesture from a teenager had such a big impact on me. And so I started thinking about all the children who deal with actual traumaโ€”sexual violence, domestic abuse, natural disasters, roadway accidents, sex traffickingโ€”and how terrified they must be.

Tell me about the drive and how it has grown.

I started it in eighth grade when I was 13. I was originally collecting in my neighborhood in north Raleigh, then at my high school, Franklin Academy, and collected about 900 that first year. I collect the stuffed animals, wash them, and sort them based on which organization or contact Iโ€™m giving them to. Then I put them in bags and drive them to wherever they need to go, whether that be Virginia, different fire stations, police stations, or safe houses.

How did COVID-19 affect things?

I was afraid when COVID hit. Things were crazy for everyone, and donating and giving up โ€ฆ a comfort object in a time of uncertainty for childrenโ€”I wouldnโ€™t think that it was going to be high on peopleโ€™s priority list. But people were actually more generous than in normal times. Iโ€™ve collected over 5,000 stuffed animals just this year, around half of what Iโ€™ve collected across the past five years.

Tell me a time when you realized this was worth it.

During COVID, I held a drive outside in my neighborhood. Two little kids came up to me, crying, holding stuffed animals, and their mom was behind them. And she [said], โ€˜Hey, my kids really want to donate stuffed animals, and Iโ€™ve been trying to explain to them whatโ€™s going on and why, but I think it would sound better coming from you.โ€™ Obviously, I canโ€™t talk to a six-year-old about sex trafficking or domestic violence. You canโ€™t say that to a kid. I got on my knees, and I was explaining to this little boy that there are kids in the world that are suffering. Theyโ€™re scared. And when youโ€™re scared, buddy, what do you go for? He [said], โ€˜I go for my stuffed frog.โ€™ And I [said], โ€˜There are kids in the world just like you, but when they get scared, they donโ€™t have a stuffed frog or a stuffed puppy or a blankie.โ€™ And he [said], โ€˜Oh, well, I want them to.โ€™ And he handed over his stuffed animals. 


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