Tag: Wiser With Age

  • Bronx Fathers Taking Action member on the importance of fatherhood

    Bronx Fathers Taking Action member on the importance of fatherhood


     

    A man with glasses and a hat smiling.
    Bronx Fathers Taking Action member John Fielder (Courtesy John Fielder)

    John Fielder, a born and raised New Yorker, has always been a savior of sorts for his community.

    Before turning 60, he was an emergency medical technician (EMT) for nearly two decades, and before that, a phlebotimist. Today, at 64, he serves on his district’s community education council as well as one of the 16 active Bronx Fathers Taking Action committee members.

    “I’m appointed by the borough president to oversee construction of schools, issues of building maintenance, curriculum, and parent involvement,†says Fielder about his role on the education council. “I also train parents to do what I do.â€

    Fielder explains the board is made of of 11 members, and there are 116 schools in the district, including elementary and middle schools. And through Bronx Fathers Taking Action, which was founded in March 2012, he provides resources and fosters relationships to reinforce fathers as positive role models for their kids.

    Although his seven children, three girls and four boys – ranging in age from 20 to 27 – are all grown up, playing an active role in the youth of his community is still crucial to him.

    A man with glasses and a hat smiling.
    John Fielder with four or his seven children.

    “My three youngest kids are foster kids, and we adopted them,†says Fielder about the family he shares with his wife, who is a school teacher. “That got me involved in special needs kids.â€

    He explains that two of his adopted children had slight learning disabilities because of the environment they came out of.

    “I was told the only thing they could get out of high school was a certificate, but I wanted them to have a real diploma,†says Fielder. “That’s what got me involved. I became president of the PTA [Parent Teacher Association] for three years. Then I became the president of the district’s education council.â€

    The more you’re involved, he says, the more you learn how the system works and how the system doesn’t work.

    “This is a business of educating our children, and it’s important we understand the system,†says Fielder. “One of my biggest issues now is we don’t have vocational schools left in the Bronx. Now [kids] have to pay to go to other schools and have a school loan bill that’s outrageous.â€

    Although Fielder also commits some of his free time to his church choir, he’s proud to say that Bronx Fathers Taking Action is one of his most important projects to date. In addition to holding monthly meetings, and reaching out to different churches, the group is partnering with a total of five middle schools and high schools in Manhattan and the Bronx to create mentoring programs.

    “Boys at that age, especially, need someone to look up to,†says Fielder. “We need to mentor them on financial aid, health benefits and financial literacy – the importance of budgeting, saving having bank accounts. What they see are guys with fancy rims and jewelry, but they’re living in the projects. What’s the value in that?â€

    Father’s Day weekend, he says, the group is holding a stickball event for older kids, and for the younger kids, a bicycle safety demonstration. In total, a couple of hundred youth and parents are expected to attend.

    “I want to get more fathers involved, because when you get more fathers involved, kids do better, because they have an example to follow,†he says. “Kids are not looking for a father with lots of money, just somebody who’s involved.â€

    To Fielder, fatherhood is one of the most important jobs there is, and it’s a job that never ends.

    “Fatherhood means mentoring, loving, training, becoming a good example, and having expectations for your children to do better than you,†he says.

    His advice for those younger than him:

    “Do what you have to, so you can do what you want to do. Be a leader and not a follower, and have high expectations for yourself.â€

  • First female Asian elected official on the East Coast continues to give back and speak up

    First female Asian elected official on the East Coast continues to give back and speak up

    Ellen Young in the Chambers being  introduced by the Speaker as a freshman member, and the first Asian American woman in the legislature in January 2007. (Courtesy Ellen Young)
    Ellen Young in the Chambers being introduced by the Speaker as a freshman member, and the first Asian American woman in the legislature in January 2007. (Courtesy Ellen Young)

    Ellen Young is not one to stay still, or stay quiet.

    The 62-year-old volunteers as the first, and only, Asian member of the Grievance Committee for the Second, Eleventh, and Thirteenth Judicial Districts. As one of 15 committee members, she reviews complaints against attorneys from Queens, Brooklyn and Staten Island. She says she spends the rest of her time at the newly founded Golden Age Learning Center, which serves approximately 200 seniors.

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  • Harlem cook realizes dream and opens vegan soul food restaurant

    Harlem cook realizes dream and opens vegan soul food restaurant

    Brenda Beener, owner and chef at Seasoned Vegan in Harlem, NY (Photo/Kori Raishon)
    Brenda Beener, owner and chef at Seasoned Vegan in Harlem, NY (Photo/Kori Raishon)

    Owning her own restaurant is something Brenda Beener has wanted for a very long time.

    “I didn’t even realize it, until I started talking to people,” says Beener, who is known in her Harlem, NY community for her exceptional vegan cooking skills.

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  • Bodybuilder and life coach says, “Spend time with yourself”

    Bodybuilder and life coach says, “Spend time with yourself”


     

     

    A woman with her arms raised in the air.
    Dr. Josefina Monasterio, bodybuilder and life coach (Courtesy Dr. Josefina Monasterio)

    Dr. Josefina Monasterio spent her childhood climbing mango trees in her rural hometown, Punta de Mata, in western Venezuela. She says she was always athletic – competing in track and field and as a gymnast through college. At 68, however, she has far from slowed down. Monasterio is an award-winning bodybuilder and life coach.

    “I started bodybuilding at 59, and now I compete with women in their 30’s, 40’s and 50’s, and I beat them,†says Monasterio laughing in her vivacious manner. “They take pictures with me!â€

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  • Horticulturist dedicates his life and career to PA’s Longwood Gardens

    Horticulturist dedicates his life and career to PA’s Longwood Gardens


    A man standing in front of some plants
    Colvin Randall at the Longwood Gardens Conservatory. (Photo/Kristina Puga)

    “If I had to choose between going blind or going deaf – that’d be tough,†says Colvin Randall, 63.

    Randall works at Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania – located 46 miles west of Philadelphia. Longwood Gardens was the estate of the late American philanthropist, Pierre S. du Pont, and features more than 1,000 acres of gardens, woodlands, meadows and fountains, including a 4.5 acre conservatory. Randall has had the rare opportunity to work there his entire 37-year career in various capacities.

    “My parents first brought me to Longwood Gardens in a carriage, but the first time I remember coming was in 1963 – for my 13th birthday,†says Randall. “It was very magical.â€

    Ten years later, when he was 23 and a recent graduate from the University of Virginia, he entered the Longwood Graduate Program in ornamental horticulture – a joint master’s program with the University of Delaware. Randall says his first job out of school was at Longwood Gardens, in 1977, pulling weeds, but he eventually became the public relations manager, the historian and information manager, and in 2008 was named the first P.S. du Pont Fellow in recognition of his varied contributions to the Gardens.

    “What I do now is a lot of historical research, work on videos, and present history talks on Longwood,†says Randall.

    The quiet and gentle historical gardener has written many materials on Longwood Gardens, including the book, “Longwood Gardens: 100+ Years of Garden Splendor,†in 2005.

    “I’m also in charge of fountain and firework displays – two nights a week during summer and every night during Christmas,†says Randall. “I figured out how to use music with fountains. “I’m fascinated by fountains…I’m also very interested in music.â€

    InstrumentsatLongwood
    The instruments at Longwood Gardens. (Photo/Kristina Puga)

    He has maintained the famous Aeolian pipe organ and a 62-bell carillon since 1978, in addition to performing concerts for audiences of more than 160,000 for 15 years.

    “We also have a grand piano made by Steinway in Queens, [New York],†says Randall excitedly, yet serenely.

    He mentions his mother was a piano teacher, and perhaps that’s how his love for music developed. Randalls was an only child, and now lives on Longwood Gardens property alone. He never married or had children.

    “I walk to work. I used to roller skate around the property at night, but I fell, so I stopped,†says Randall smiling. “In April/May the tulips come out…the spring brings bird song. Just today, I heard some robins chirping. The sounds in a garden setting are just fantastic.â€

    He says working full-time as a Fellow at Longwood Gardens is an honor, and he couldn’t imagine doing anything else – except maybe volunteer at The Metropolitan Opera if he lived in NYC.

    “Find a job that pleases you,†recommends Randall. “If I had chosen to be a stockbroker to make lots of money, I’m sure I’d be retired by now, because I couldn’t take it. I enjoy very much what I do…because it is not repetitive, and in researching history, hopefully future generations will not have to do the research. The information will be there….I wish I could go on forever.â€