While some of the pieces are small and inexpensive there is no such thing as an unimportant piece in the construction of a home. It’s like a giant 3D puzzle, sometimes a missing piece would simply make the house incomplete. Other times, a missing piece could make the house unlivable. You can’t look at a box of puzzle pieces and say, “Oh, we don’t need that piece,” if you want a complete puzzle. The same holds true for a Habitat House.
Several years ago, I was the Statewide Coordinator for a relief and development organization that put out a “Gifts for Life” catalog. It listed all sorts of critical items you could “buy” that would be given to a family, or a village, to help them become self-sustaining. Each item bought from the catalog was donated in someone’s name.
When you get to the list below, consider donating one of the pieces in the name of someone special. Not only will you help build a house and touch the lives of everyone in a family, you’ll be giving a unique gift that can touch the heart of the person you give it to.
Can you imagine your bathroom not having a vanity in it? The vanity holds the sink that allows everyone to wash his or her hands and stay healthy. The vanity usually is the storage place for all the cleaning supplies that keep the bathroom clean and healthy. There may be only one or two vanity tops in most Habitat homes, but every one of them is critical.
You’d be pretty hard pressed to find an outhouse still in use in the Twin Cities, but that’s exactly what you’d have to use if you didn’t have a toilet in every bathroom. To be good stewards of the environment, and respectful users of our natural resources, Twin Cities Habitat puts low flow toilets into every home we build. Low flow toilets also save our homeowners money, giving them a little more cash in their pockets to spend on nutritious food, transportation, or a mortgage payment. We think they’re a good investment, and a great gift.
Safety and security for a family can’t be had without good entryway doors. They keep out unwanted weather, and unwanted intruders. They are totally necessary, and a totally cool gift.
A dry basement is a healthy basement, it’s also financially wise. If water gets in, mold can form and have a severe impact on the family. For a homeowner who has given their family more living space by finishing the basement, a wet basement could mean a severe financial hit, too. The gift of a dry basement would make an awesome stocking stuffer.
Obviously, much more goes into a home than what’s listed above, but the list should give you an idea of what donated dollars are spent on. Building a home for a family is rewarding, and expensive, and everything that goes into the home is important.
I hope something on the list inspires you to donate the cost of that item in someone’s name. Give a box of nails or a window in a child’s name, and you teach one child they can positively impact the lives of everyone in a family. As a parent, the gifts that help others are usually the ones my children cherish most. This year, give a gift from our list, and change the lives of a family forever.