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  • Women in Leadership: Former Girl Scout becomes leader

    The Daily Star-Journal, Warrensburg, Moissouri
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
    February 28, 2014 Friday


    Women in Leadership: Former Girl Scout becomes leader

    by : J. "Miles" Ventimiglia, The Daily Star-Journal, Warrensburg, Mo.



    Feb. 28--Running on about 90 minutes of sleep, Kristen Sullivan is
    among those who helped put together Girl Scout World Thinking Day at
    First Christian Church at Gay and Holden streets.

    In that respect, as a mother and active community member, Sullivan
    represents many women in Johnson County.

    "I was getting things ready for today," she said over the roar of
    about 200 people, mostly schoolgirls. "We were dipping chocolate
    candies, baking cakes, cutting up stuff."

    The look of pandemonium in the hall has been well organized by
    Sullivan, with other women who give of themselves: Adrianne Nadell,
    Jessica Lund and Carissa Miller.

    "We were an awesome team. I could not have done any of this by myself.
    This is all of us together. We worked really hard. They are all
    wonderful ladies and I would work with any of them in a heartbeat."

    Getting ready for the Feb. 22 event also meant creating SWAPs, an
    acronym meaning Something With A Pin.

    "It's a Girl Scout tradition and we're using them this year as a
    fundraiser for World Thinking Day," she said. "Girls collect them and
    they can swap them with friends. Our SWAPs today are significant. Our
    SWAP represents the country of Armenia."

    Armenia's national symbol, as shown on the pin, is Mount Ararat.
    Through the years and changing political boundaries, the mountain has
    become part of Turkey, but remains revered by Armenians

    "They consider it their holy symbol, because it is the believed
    resting place of Noah's ark," she said. "So (the SWAP) is a little
    mountain and an ark."

    Taking a breather at a table -- outside of the main hall, where
    children laugh and talk, or ask for information to write in their
    "passport" books about each country -- Sullivan said she became a Girl
    Scout leader as an outgrowth of experience.

    "I was a Girl Scout as a child for about four years in Colorado
    Springs," Sullivan said. "When my oldest daughter, Audrey, started
    kindergarten, I saw a flyer for a (Girl Scout) recruitment event and
    wanted her to be involved with Scouts because I had had such a good
    experience with it."

    At the recruitment event, she volunteered to lead a troop.

    "The last two years have been so much fun with these girls," Sullivan
    said. "The girls get so much out of it. They're learning and we do
    service activities. We teach the girls about outreach and helping
    others. ...

    "Girls can do anything, we believe, and we just want to encourage them."

    The girls earn badges for accomplishments, and socialization is
    another big part of what the organization offers.

    "They're fostering friendships that last years. It's a time for them
    to come together a couple of times a month to share their experiences;
    bond with each other."

    The experience works both ways, Sullivan said, because she gets
    something from helping to guide the girls.

    "I love the fact that they love it so much and that's what keeps me going."

    Rising from the table, Sullivan prepares to return to the hubbub in
    the main hall.

    "I'm going to see if I can find the coffee I brought in at 7 a.m."



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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