Letter from Leigh Ann: Warm Wishes from Wear the Cape This Holiday Season

Wishing you the joy of family, the happiness of friends, and the wonder of the season. May the spirit of the holidays be with you throughout the new year.

I’d like to take this opportunity to thank the many friends who have helped Wear the Cape and the kidkind foundation get off to an exciting start this year, reaching kids across the country with encouragement and education on the power of kindness and good character. Both the Cape and the foundation focus on helping kids understand what good character looks like in everyday life and on giving them the confidence to do what’s right, not what’s easy.

The Wear the Cape team is beyond excited about the foundation’s first major project, which is already underway. Our goal is to touch as many kids as possible and truly move the needle on the youngest generation’s attitudes, behavior and outlook on the world. From consulting with experts, teachers and parents, it’s clear that children are very impressionable in the early elementary years. Based on our discussions, we set our sights on publishing a children’s picture book that will paint an easily-understandable picture of good character and communicate that choosing to not bully, even when in a relative position of power (e.g., a student in class who is more athletic, smarter or more popular than others), is more honorable and respectable than being unkind.

The book is being written in a powerful way that we hope will stay with children throughout their lives (I, to this day, remember books that I read as a kid, don’t you?). The next steps are editing, illustration and publishing. The plan is to produce thousands of copies and donate them to Kindergarten through 2nd grade classrooms across the country, particularly in underprivileged areas.

On behalf of the thousands of young children who, in the new year, will receive a free book that could greatly impact their lives, I thank you for your generosity in helping to bring the gift of greater knowledge to kids. Helping our youth understand the powerful values that shape one’s life every day will make their futures even brighter and our communities better places to live.

Separately, the kidkind foundation will also be creating a scholarship program, and we are holding focus groups to identify more ways to make a big impact with your generous donation. Ideas are welcomed.

Thanks, again, for your kindness. It’s so uplifting to see others join the movement and lend their support to this important cause.

All the best to you and yours,

Leigh Ann and the Wear the Cape for all kidkind Team

Holiday Express - The Season Is Almost Near
Flickr/doug_wertman

 

2013 Holiday Gift Guide – Give to Give!

The holiday season is now in full swing! We’re excited to roll out several additional products today that encourage conversations on character and kindness. To see what’s new, click here for the 2013 Holiday Gift Guide!

Give back to kids across the country while you give to loved ones this year. Wear the Cape™ donates 10% of its net profits for apparel and gear to the kidkind foundation, which works to teach children and communities about the power of kindness and good character. The remaining goes toward developing educational materials and furthering the mission.

Click below to find gifts for all ages. And we’re offering lots of ways to save:

  • To kick off the holiday shopping season, get 25% off all orders today (Black Friday) through Cyber Monday (11/29-12/2) with code SHOP.
  • To celebrate the holidays, 10% off all orders with code CAPE13 – use this code starting next Tuesday!
  • Free shipping when you spend $50 or more with code SHP50.
  • 20% off when you spend $100 or more with code 20OFF.
  • Free Wear the Cape car/fridge magnet with all orders of $25 or more!

Click here for the 2013 Holiday Gift Guide

gift guide PNGHappy holidays! Thanks for supporting Wear the Cape!

Wearing the Cape, 1941 Style

rustic american flag
Flickr/Beverly & Pack

In honor of Veterans Day, we are  proud to bring you this guest post on patriotism from Ted Ashburn of Boston, MA:

Guest blog icon      A number of years ago while at home on break from college, I happened to come across a framed newspaper clipping in the attic of my family’s home that I had never seen before.  It was a very modest presentation: a simple off-gold, 16×18 frame containing a red mat with a thin inner blue border.  Within the borders, copied onto long-since yellowed paper, was a small article from what I would soon realize was a December 1941 edition of my hometown’s newspaper The Kokomo Tribune.  There were also a number of signed messages of acclaim on the yellowed paper surrounding the article.  These messages were from the former Mayor of my hometown (Kokomo, IN), the newspaper’s owner and various local military leaders among others.  The title of this short article was “Patriotism.”

I read the article, then I read it again.  After I read it a third time, I was in tears.  I could not believe what I was reading, yet I could.  I was not at all surprised by the actions that were described in the text, but I was shocked that it was just simply lying in an attic.  It deserved to be displayed proudly.  It read as follows:

patriotism article

Just like American Solders, these American girls served without question, asking only to do this “bit” for their Country. – Sgt. Whitehead

My compliments to these two fine Kokomo young ladies who served this country so well during a war emergency. – Henry E. Tisdale, Lt. Col. F A U.S.A., Commanding Indiana District

 America at its best with the youth, both the boys and the girls doing a grand job. – J. S. Kileline

 Sure it happened here.  What else did you expect. – P. L. Haworth, Commander, American Legion

 The heading is enough.  “Patriotism.” – William W. Workman, Postmaster

 It is indeed a privilege to have the opportunity to publish this type of action on the part of all good Americans. – R. H. Blacklidge, Owner, The Kokomo Tribune

 I am happy this example of typical Kokomo Americanism has been noted. – Harold G. Frieland, Mayor

You can tell what service is best?  This is how victories are won. – Glenn R. Hillis

It was a privilege to write this story. – McSeel, Reporter

My parents operated their own construction company and made a wonderful home together.  Both have lived all of their lives in the small town in which they were born.  They were high school sweethearts.  Drafted into the Army in 1943, my father proposed to my mother from overseas while in the service, and they married soon after he returned in 1946.  They then made their own way together by starting and building a construction business and raising a family where morals, the importance of hard work and manners were taught by example every day.  To me, they are the best examples of what it means to be an American I have ever encountered.

I have never been able to read this article without being moved to tears.  You see, Mary Schleeter was my mother’s maiden name, and she was 16 years old at the time the events in this short article took place.  This framed newspaper clipping is now displayed proudly in my home, and my mother, who is now 90 years old, continues to insist that her and her friend Mary Jo’s actions on Monday, December 8, 1941 were “no big deal.”  This is just one example of how Tom Brokaw’s The Greatest Generation “Wore the Cape” when it needed to in 1941.

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