Let me start off first by saying that those of us in the nonprofit arena are NOT in the business to get lots of recognition (or to make the big bucks!). That being said, I will tell you it is nice to receive recognition for your hard work.
Hope Cottage has been a member, since Day One, of the United Way of Metropolitan Dallas and before it was the United Way, the Community Chest. At one time, United Way donations provided 85% of the Hope Cottage budget (that equals close to $890,000). We are proud to be a charter member and value our partnership with United Way.
Every year, the United Way rolls out their Workplace Giving Campaigns and we hit the dusty speaking circuit. It is a privelege to share stories of how your donations have helped Hope Cottage serve more than 30,000 women and children over the past 92 years. Representatives from Hope Cottage speak any time - including 3 AM at UPS, anywhere - including an airport tarmac and under any conditions - yes, even competing with machinery. We do this because we care about Hope Cottage and realize how important it is for people to know about the work being done here.
Today was the Annual Awards Luncheon and Hope Cottage was honored to be chosen as a winner for our participation in the most Agency Fairs. In addition, our name was mentioned for providing 17 speaking engagements for United Way at various corporations in the metroplex. Thank you United Way and thank YOU, our donors, for continuing to give.
Hope Cottage is the oldest nonprofit, non sectarian adoption agency in Dallas. Since 1918 Hope Cottage has been building and nurturing strong families through counseling, education and adoption services.
If you have questions about adoption, please call Hope Cottage at 214.526.8721.
If you are a woman facing a crises pregnancy and would like to talk to someone about adoption, please call Hope Cottage at 1.800.944.4464 or 214.404.4546.
Hope Cottage is the oldest non-profit, non-sectarian adoption agency in Dallas. Since 1918 more than 12,000 children have found loving, permanent homes and more than 30,000 women, children and their families have been strengthened through education, counseling and adoption services.
Showing posts with label Dallas adoption agency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dallas adoption agency. Show all posts
Friday, December 10, 2010
Friday, August 13, 2010
Family Traditions
I have a couple of friends from high school who I think are some of the most gifted writers around. I envy their ability to lay down their thoughts in such thought provoking, entertaining ways. I read Berry Simpson's blog this morning about family traditions and knew I just had to share it. Hope Cottage is all about making families and helping them to stay strong. What family traditions do you have?
My family had a tradition of making home made ice cream with family and friends. I still remember sitting on top of the hand crank freezer while my grandfather turned the handle. Sometimes it would be vanilla ice cream, sometimes peaches from his back yard tree would be added. In the late 60's Helen Corbitt fudge sauce and peanut butter sauce were added to the mix and I do remember Chocolate Sheet cake as an extra treat. I laugh because we would usually need to make two 6 quart freezers of ice cream when we had the Thompsons over. One freezer for my dad and Daddy Leon (patriach of the Thompson family) and one freezer for the other 7 of us! That ice cream was good eating! A few years ago I dusted off our ice cream freezer and decided to start the tradition again. I still must have a wooden container, but I have gone electric for the motor! Hopefully our boys will continue the celebration.
Our ice cream recipe is below, but before I go, I want to ask - what are/were your family traditions? Share them with us here!
Lue's Ice Cream
10 eggs
2 1/2 cups sugar
2 cans Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk
1 can Carnation Evaporated Milk
two good "glugs" of vanilla (I kid you not, that is what the recipe says)
1 quart half and half and whatever room is left in the container, top it off with heavy cream
Mix everything well together (I use a hand mixer). Place in ice cream freezer and freeze. After the ice cream freezer stops, I have found that I need to then put the ice cream into a container and put it in the refrigerator freezer for a couple of hours to firm up a little more - that is if you can keep from consuming the ice cream on the spot.
Hope Cottage is the oldest nonprofit, nonsectarian adoption agency in Dallas. Since 1918, Hope Cottage has been nurturing and building families through education, counseling and adoption services.
If you have questions about adoption, please call Hope Cottage at 214.526.8721.
If you are a woman facing a crises pregnancy and would like to talk to someone about adoption, please call Hope Cottage at 1.800.944.4464 or 214.404.4546.
My family had a tradition of making home made ice cream with family and friends. I still remember sitting on top of the hand crank freezer while my grandfather turned the handle. Sometimes it would be vanilla ice cream, sometimes peaches from his back yard tree would be added. In the late 60's Helen Corbitt fudge sauce and peanut butter sauce were added to the mix and I do remember Chocolate Sheet cake as an extra treat. I laugh because we would usually need to make two 6 quart freezers of ice cream when we had the Thompsons over. One freezer for my dad and Daddy Leon (patriach of the Thompson family) and one freezer for the other 7 of us! That ice cream was good eating! A few years ago I dusted off our ice cream freezer and decided to start the tradition again. I still must have a wooden container, but I have gone electric for the motor! Hopefully our boys will continue the celebration.
Our ice cream recipe is below, but before I go, I want to ask - what are/were your family traditions? Share them with us here!
Lue's Ice Cream
10 eggs
2 1/2 cups sugar
2 cans Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk
1 can Carnation Evaporated Milk
two good "glugs" of vanilla (I kid you not, that is what the recipe says)
1 quart half and half and whatever room is left in the container, top it off with heavy cream
Mix everything well together (I use a hand mixer). Place in ice cream freezer and freeze. After the ice cream freezer stops, I have found that I need to then put the ice cream into a container and put it in the refrigerator freezer for a couple of hours to firm up a little more - that is if you can keep from consuming the ice cream on the spot.
Hope Cottage is the oldest nonprofit, nonsectarian adoption agency in Dallas. Since 1918, Hope Cottage has been nurturing and building families through education, counseling and adoption services.
If you have questions about adoption, please call Hope Cottage at 214.526.8721.
If you are a woman facing a crises pregnancy and would like to talk to someone about adoption, please call Hope Cottage at 1.800.944.4464 or 214.404.4546.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
An Adoption Story - Brought to You by Hope Cottage
Share this adoption journey and a family made by Hope Cottage.
Seven years ago Joe and I sat in separate steel chairs as the doctor leaned forward, resting his elbows on his desk, his words betrayed his smile..."I give you no more than a 5% chance of ever having children." We were devastated. The dream of our curly, red-headed, freckle-faced, green-eyed child smashed against the white walls. It wasn't supposed to be this way...but it was. After that hour passed, we looked at the pieces of our dream that were left. Our hearts and our hopes had survived in the shards and we held onto them as we made a new path for our journey.
According to our doctor, adoption was our only option. It was also the safest bet that we would end up with a child. My search ended at Hope Cottage. I loved the name. A name is a bizarre reason to choose an adoption agency, I know, but the reality of our family was dependant on that idea, the idea of hope. Joe and I combed through the website and absorbed all the information. Soon we made the initial call. That call was followed by other calls and orientations and informational sessions and huge binders full of materials. We made a scrapbook of us to show to perspective birthparents and wrote letters telling about ourselves. Once a month, we attended a Hope Cottage support group along with other waiting families. We attended one, then two, then three and so on learning about the legal side of adoptions, birth-families' feelings, and adoptive families' feelings. We loved learning how to be parents, but wondered along with all the others in the room when we would be. We jumped when the phone rang hoping it was "the call". We looked deep into our hearts during the times of helplessness and held strongly to hope that someday all of this would result in a child.
Eleven months passed, and the phone rang and it was "the call". We drove anxiously to Dallas wondering what we would say. When we arrived we learned that Janine, the birthmother we were scheduled to meet, had gone into labor that morning. We knew we had to meet this little baby boy. Before we laid eyes on him though, we had to meet with his birthmother. We called Hope Cottage and set up the second meeting with Janine.
We met her at a Starbucks in Dallas close the the hospital after she was released. Scariest first encounter I have ever experienced. She was tall, blonde, loud, gregarious and just as scared as we were. The conversation was easy and the answer then was simple. It was a match. We met our baby the following day.
The first time we saw him he was hooked up to tubes, but breathing on his own. Joe held him. I fed him. He pooped and I changed him. Janine was there and smiling. She asked us what we were going to call him and we told her the name we had decided on during the drive down. She even asked the nurses to start calling him that name. We continued to visit daily for the next four weeks. Joe would work a full day, drive to pick me up and we would drive to Dallas and spend time with our baby. We held him and sang to him and read to him. I brought Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little and Baby Island and we went through all of those. Slowly but surely the tubes came off, and it was time for us to take our baby home. Years of trying, 11 months of waiting, and now, instant baby.
It didn't matter that he didn't have my curls or green eyes or Joe's red hair and freckles, he had our hearts, our hopes and our dreams. The shards had come together to make this family. This is exactly how our life is supposed to be. We are grateful for the heartache and the frustration and the wait. We are grateful for Janine. We are grateful for the feeling of hope.
Hope Cottage is the oldest non-profit, non-sectarian adoption agency in Dallas. Since 1918 Hope Cottage has been building and nurturing strong families through education, counseling and adoption services. To learn more call 214.526.8721.
Seven years ago Joe and I sat in separate steel chairs as the doctor leaned forward, resting his elbows on his desk, his words betrayed his smile..."I give you no more than a 5% chance of ever having children." We were devastated. The dream of our curly, red-headed, freckle-faced, green-eyed child smashed against the white walls. It wasn't supposed to be this way...but it was. After that hour passed, we looked at the pieces of our dream that were left. Our hearts and our hopes had survived in the shards and we held onto them as we made a new path for our journey.
According to our doctor, adoption was our only option. It was also the safest bet that we would end up with a child. My search ended at Hope Cottage. I loved the name. A name is a bizarre reason to choose an adoption agency, I know, but the reality of our family was dependant on that idea, the idea of hope. Joe and I combed through the website and absorbed all the information. Soon we made the initial call. That call was followed by other calls and orientations and informational sessions and huge binders full of materials. We made a scrapbook of us to show to perspective birthparents and wrote letters telling about ourselves. Once a month, we attended a Hope Cottage support group along with other waiting families. We attended one, then two, then three and so on learning about the legal side of adoptions, birth-families' feelings, and adoptive families' feelings. We loved learning how to be parents, but wondered along with all the others in the room when we would be. We jumped when the phone rang hoping it was "the call". We looked deep into our hearts during the times of helplessness and held strongly to hope that someday all of this would result in a child.
Eleven months passed, and the phone rang and it was "the call". We drove anxiously to Dallas wondering what we would say. When we arrived we learned that Janine, the birthmother we were scheduled to meet, had gone into labor that morning. We knew we had to meet this little baby boy. Before we laid eyes on him though, we had to meet with his birthmother. We called Hope Cottage and set up the second meeting with Janine.
We met her at a Starbucks in Dallas close the the hospital after she was released. Scariest first encounter I have ever experienced. She was tall, blonde, loud, gregarious and just as scared as we were. The conversation was easy and the answer then was simple. It was a match. We met our baby the following day.
The first time we saw him he was hooked up to tubes, but breathing on his own. Joe held him. I fed him. He pooped and I changed him. Janine was there and smiling. She asked us what we were going to call him and we told her the name we had decided on during the drive down. She even asked the nurses to start calling him that name. We continued to visit daily for the next four weeks. Joe would work a full day, drive to pick me up and we would drive to Dallas and spend time with our baby. We held him and sang to him and read to him. I brought Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little and Baby Island and we went through all of those. Slowly but surely the tubes came off, and it was time for us to take our baby home. Years of trying, 11 months of waiting, and now, instant baby.
It didn't matter that he didn't have my curls or green eyes or Joe's red hair and freckles, he had our hearts, our hopes and our dreams. The shards had come together to make this family. This is exactly how our life is supposed to be. We are grateful for the heartache and the frustration and the wait. We are grateful for Janine. We are grateful for the feeling of hope.
Hope Cottage is the oldest non-profit, non-sectarian adoption agency in Dallas. Since 1918 Hope Cottage has been building and nurturing strong families through education, counseling and adoption services. To learn more call 214.526.8721.
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Hope Cottage is Looking for the Most Joyful Baby
Dallas adoption agency, Hope Cottage, is looking for the Most Joyful Baby around.
Post a picture of your child enjoying his/her most joyful self on the Hope Cottage Facebook page. Children depicted must be age 3 or under at the time the picture was taken. The contest is free to enter and open to all. Photos must be posted by 5 pm August 10th. Winner receives a prize and all decisions of the judges are final.
Since 1918, Hope Cottage has been building strong families through education, counseling and adoption.
Post a picture of your child enjoying his/her most joyful self on the Hope Cottage Facebook page. Children depicted must be age 3 or under at the time the picture was taken. The contest is free to enter and open to all. Photos must be posted by 5 pm August 10th. Winner receives a prize and all decisions of the judges are final.
Since 1918, Hope Cottage has been building strong families through education, counseling and adoption.
Friday, July 16, 2010
Dallas Adoption Agency Finds Most Patriotic Babies
Dallas Adoption Agency, Hope Cottage, is pleased to announce the winners of the Most Patriotic Baby Photo Contest.
Grand Prize Winner

Little Miss Liberty
Each month proud parents post pictures of their darlings on the Hope Cottage Facebook page. The rules of the contest are simple:
- Picture must follow the theme for the month
- Picture must be posted on the Hope Cottage Facebook page.
- Child(ren) depicted must be aged 3 or under in the photo (they can currently be older than 3 now, they just have to be age 3 or under in the photo posted)
- Photos must be posted by 5 pm on the tenth of the month
- Decisions of the judges are final
Grand Prize Winner

Little Miss Liberty
Theme for the August Photo Contest is Most Joyful Baby. Post your entries now and tell your friends.
Dallas Adoption Agency, Hope Cottage, is the oldest non-profit, non-sectarian adoption agency in Dallas. Since 1918, Hope Cottage has been building strong families through education, counseling and adoption services. If you have questions about adoption, contact us at 214.526.8721.
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