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Jack & Jill
If you want to pursue membership in Jack & Jill do you have to rich??? and do you have to be invited?:o
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yes, you must be invited. no, you do not have to be rich. however, keep in mind, membership does cost...;)
from a J&J alum:) |
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As far as rich... I think it depends on the J&J Chapter. The chapter I was reared under requested $$$ from my folks. But we did a lot throughout the year. Recently, they have incorporated a community service that the kids are supposed to do. |
How would you go about being invited?
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J&J Membership
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I have a young daughter and I want to afford her the same opportunities J&J provided me, I plan to get reactive in my local chapter soon on my own. Good Luck in your quest! Clear Lake/ Bay Area Chapter Alum J&J of America, Inc. |
I have a different question about J&J. Forgive my naivete, but I thought of J&J as a way for Af. Am. children to interact with one another when in communities that may not afford children of similar backgrounds to meet and greet each other. Is the purpose different now?
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I was a child member of J-n-J back from 1986 to 1998. Yes your Mother has to be invited b/c the org is an org of MOTHERS helping their children. In my city we had 2 chapters (folks were crazy to do that.. but oh well) and they were trying to extend invites to the most influential Mothers (sometimes the moms got invited b/c of who the husband was...) in the city. Being influential doesn't mean rich all the time, but they were the power players.
Firecracker08... I think that depends on what city... cause in a sense it is... but if you have kids coming from money backgrounds... J&J was no better than a Links or Girlfriends mtg with kids....(and I bet you will find the same membership overlapping in all those orgs and in the sororities...) |
This is gonna sound silly probably...... but are Jack and Jill daughters given some sort of legacy consideration? How about wives of Jack and Jill sons?
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Good Question
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No problem . . risingstar. I guess that's why they say it couldn't hurt to ask 'cause someone else might be wondering the same thing :D
But the main reason I ask is because I was working with a young man yesterday (school tutor) and he has soo much talent (he's published some of his poetry, he's a musician with a cd, a comedian, and an all around smart guy . . he calls himself a renniasance (sp) man). But his concern was that in the NY project in which he lives no one will ever "find" him (talent wise). I was just thinking that this 14 year old could possiblely benifit from that advantages and opportunities that J&J may offer, but how would he and other great students, parents, ect who may or may not be in such a difficult situation in the words of my student "get found" or find their way to the organization? |
There are plenty of youth development non-profit organizations that can help the young man continue on a positive path. http://www.citykids.com is just one of them.
Otherwise, he needs to go to high school, go to college, and work on finding himself, not getting found. :) He is not a victim, he is a winner. |
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Your question is: Can it be different or changed? In some regions or areas of the country--the United States, no. In some other regions of this country, yes. What does it take to change, A LOT of hardwork, energy and effort. In ALL that you do, it has to be that. I have lived in my current city for ~4 years. I have already made a significant impact on concepts and things I felt that needed to be changed. The community I am interested in buffering and upholding is the African American community. Through my Sorority, I have introduced a Health Disparity Elimination related Health Forum. The forum will be sponsored by Komen for the Cure, Pfizer, Novartis, Eli Lilly, American Heart Association, Glida's club, Cancer Lifeline, PCC Natural Food Markets. The location was given to my chapter for FREE. I am a professional healthcare provider and Yes, I did all of this for FREE. I was NOT paid for the hours I spent consulting and event planning. Most people get well over $5000 for this kind of job. I have the State Medical Director presenting, for free. I have one the state's best Breast Cancer Surgeons, presenting for FREE. I have another hospital's STD director presenting HIV/AIDS for FREE... Kids feel these kinds of things should be given to them without any work. For me to finagle all this, yes, I had to be a project whore. I had to attend bullisht-azzed meetings until the middle of night, spend several night away from my husband, get up EARLY in the morning to slang stuff. That is the "name of the game". And see, my husband thinks it is ALL about one's brain or intelligence... Yes, intelligence only allows to KEEP your job. But getting in there and meeting folks--NETWORKING--that is where you need to be... Unsure about where to start? COMMUNITY SERVICE in your area of interest... Non-profits always need help, that's a guarentee. In fact, in some med school, it is a requirement for admission... |
Amen, amen, amen.
Tenacity, hard work, all that. A few of my "organization-minded" friend always ask me "Don't you want to be in the Boule/Sigma Pi Phi?" And I tell them "What can the Boule do for me that I can't do for myself?" |
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Some of father's business deals happened because of members of the Boule assisted him... Not everyone needs all these things. But to be in a "high stakes game" you will have to ante up. This game is "high stakes" as much as they make you pay to be in the Boule... |
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I totally agree. It takes ALOT of work, hard work, and I hope to one day be able to accomplish just as much as you have. I've just started but have a lot on my list to make happen. I know that is where I am going to build my networking as well. |
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Then you can think about other things in your life. If you don't have grades and units to get your degree, then how can you even spend the brain energy required to work on something outside of that? You can volunteer with your church an everything, because you need a spiritual barometer to keep yourself sane. But God granted you the opportunity to be in college and He expects to use THIS chance wisely. Otherwise, you have gone Prodigal. |
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Like I said... the folks in my chapter were influential, not necessarily all rich... cause if that was the case my folks and my aunt and uncle would NOT have to worry about bills... and that is SUCH a lie. We work hard for ours, and the members in my chapter (can't speak on the demographics of the other chapter in the city) were hard workers in their lives. They are pillars in the community. No silver platters here! |
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I agree with your thought about the "game", AKAMonet... so true! |
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I mean, I might have to sell my "Trolls Be Gone, apply directly to Head" spray to the Boule folks... |
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Come on ya'll PLEEEEEASE stop with all of this hard work crap.
Everybody on this board knows that it only takes being considered to be in the upper crust and having a connection to get into J&J, the Links, etc. I know from personal experience (not with J&J but with the Links). I had to exhibit absolutely NO hard work to have a Link who was the mother of a guy that I was dating (and who wanted me to get married to her son) ask me if I wanted to join her Links chapter. We decided that it would not have made sense b/c I was moving to another state for lawschool (I was an engineer at the time). No hard work there...just connections. We all know that these organizations are all about ELITISM. The woman that I referred to above told me, for example, that when her children were in J&J, the chapter did not take single mothers (no matter how HARD they worked) and did not take families that had a blue collar father (no matter how HARD he worked to support his family). If you're not considered to be one of the elite and upper crust, sorry for ya. That seems to be how these orgs roll. Not to say anything bad about them but just to keep it REAL cause ya'll are driving me crazy with all this hard work crap. :) Now my personal opinion is that you can expose your kids to other positive AA kids and role models w/out putting them into an elitist org wherein they will never interact with other AA kids that are more typical to the economic levels of most AA kids. Not saying anything is wrong with J&J but it is not a NECESSITY to have well exposed kids. Similarly, the Links is not a necessity. It's a whole bunch of money and if you're already in the most prestigious sisterhood on the globe, what time will you have for the Links? Unless you're just going to be a member in name only or you just like spending all of your time in meetings away from your man and/or kids. If you just like GIVING AWAY YOUR MONEY then give it to me. :) SC Quote:
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Now my child is a MBA and senior marketing manager for a large consumer products company and some of those kids are.... let's just say their modicum of success is rather lower. Not to mention the number of mothers who are now divorced. - LOL ETA: Summerchild I posted this before I read your post. Amen! |
The invitation process:
The kids are divided into age groups. Each chapter sets a limit for the number of kids in a group. When a vacancy occurs, i.e. the child moves to the next group, or the family moves, then mothers are nominated that have a child in that age group. If the mother who is accepted has other children then they are also accepted in the other age groups, vacancy or not. Sorta like add-ons. :rolleyes: I was an add-on, because my mother was invited because of my younger sister. So I had to fit in with a group that had been together for many years. If any of you are from the Lou, suffice it to say that Michael Roberts was in my group, or rather I was in his. His younger brother was in my sister's group. |
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A lot of the activites that are done in J&J we did as a family. I think my sister and I got more out of that than we probably would have had we done those things through J&J. Bottom line, I'm sure that it is great to be in J&J, but it is not the end of the world if your kids are not in it. Oh, I know some of those J&J kids, and they did not turn out any better or worse than we did (my sister and I). |
I interpreted Black_princess' comments as one who was not born with a "silver spoon" could break into the some of these groups, not if one was fortunate to be pass the "paper bag test".
Yes, these groups are about elitism. It is all about who you know. It is all about who you married or simply how far you can passe blanc. I was born into it. Yes, I am saditiy and what of it? But the Links blackballed my mother because they felt she did not contribute anything to the community, albeit my folks had just moved to SoCal and my father was establishing himself and his business. This ~30 years ago. And because we lived in a "new construction" area in 1975 and because my grandfather was very high up the elitist change it still did not remove the fact that the Links straightjacketed my mother... Then she proved to be somebody, about something and make somethangs happen and they have since asked her to join dozens of time. She plainly say absolutely not. Moreover, I HATED JNJ in my city. I can count on one hand how many in JNJ's in my teen group succeeded in life--meaning becoming taxpayers and NOT in jail... Because several of them had out-of-wedlock children, in jail, addicted to drugs. On the West Coast, we are lucky to even discuss things like never have gone to prison, much less folks think about college. We all have to be mindful of that. |
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PS: I love the comment "Yes, I am saditiy and what of it?" :D When I read that, I immediatly thought of myself and the bourgeois adjectives that my friends sometimes use to describe me:) |
This a great discussion.
My hometown doesn't have J&J, but we do have a similar org, which was actually co-founded by a Past National President of Delta Sigma Theta. It was very much an "elite" organization, and it was well known that only girls from certain families would be invited to join. My parents were from the ghetto, and not from my hometown, so I guess we (or should I say I) wasn't good enough. Even though I'm one generation from the projects, I feel like I'm doing good to be only 24 with 2 degrees and a job that I love. Who knows, maybe when I grow up and get married and have kids, maybe I'll be cool enough to be invited to J&J. |
I apologize. I must have been told completely wrong so I retract my statements. One person that I spoke with said that it was all about hard work, but she was sadly mistaken so I apologize for that. My bad. Please don't hold that against me.:D
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I thought that the mention of hard work was in reference to AKA_Monet's statement about creating change in our respective and collective communities--not about getting invited to join one of these organizations.
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It really was. I was really responding to how much she has done in her community, which is inspiring, and a lot of hard work. You are very right. But I did also receive the wrong info about how the organizations want individuals who are hard workers in the community. I am still in school and have about 2 years left and that is what I am focused on, but I do have a lot of goals and plans for myself once I am finished and it is all about what I can do for the community. I would just like to be involved with organizations as well, but I will not base what I do on that.
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Shoot... I don't even know who got my mom invited... either me or my bro. And Soror S... We actually did have a single mom in our chapter while I was there, and b/c her nephew was living with her under her care, he was added to the group when she joined. |
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But I really do think every chapter is diff for real! |
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You better stop that Jubi! You are too cool! :D |
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It was... you are correct. |
Oh, my fault ya'll. :) I thought you guys were talking about it takes hard work to *get into* these orgs.
SC |
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