dads4kesem Archives - City Dads Group https://citydadsgroup.com/tag/dads4kesem/ Navigating Fatherhood Together Fri, 17 Dec 2021 18:32:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://i0.wp.com/citydadsgroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/CityDads_Favicon.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 dads4kesem Archives - City Dads Group https://citydadsgroup.com/tag/dads4kesem/ 32 32 105029198 City Dads Blog, Members Nominated for Social Media’s Iris Awards https://citydadsgroup.com/iris-awards-2017/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=iris-awards-2017 https://citydadsgroup.com/iris-awards-2017/#respond Tue, 02 May 2017 13:49:22 +0000 http://citydadsgrpstg.wpengine.com/?p=665425
iris awards parent blogging
The Iris Awards honor the best in parent blogging as nominated by peers in the industry. 

City Dads Group and several of its members recently received nominations for social media work in the past year from its online parenting peers.

The City Dads Group blog has been nominated for Group or News Blog of the Year for the second straight time in the annual Iris Awards. The Iris Awards honor “the art of parenthood,” according to its organizers.

The following City Dads members also received individual Iris Award nominations:

Six City Dads members also received nods for participating in the #Dads4Kesem walk across England to raise money to start a camp for the children of cancer patients, an effort nominated for Philanthropic Work of the Year. Those members are: Jeff Bogle (Philadelphia), Jason Greene (NYC), Whit Honea (Los Angeles), Michael Moebes (Atlanta), Chris Routly (Portland) and Higley.

The Iris Awards recognize “the finest expressions in art, commentary, commerce, philanthropy, ideas and connections, all the while celebrating the emerging industry created by its pioneers and leaders,” according its website.

Nominations and award winners are determined by votes received from past attendees of the Mom 2.0 Summit and Dad 2.0 Summit parenting conferences. The awards ceremony is scheduled for May 12 in Orlando, Fla., at the 2017 Mom 2.0 conference.

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Dads4Kesem Letting Kids of Cancer Patients Be Kids Again https://citydadsgroup.com/dads4kesem-cancer-hadrians-wall/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=dads4kesem-cancer-hadrians-wall https://citydadsgroup.com/dads4kesem-cancer-hadrians-wall/#comments Wed, 06 Jul 2016 13:48:56 +0000 http://citydadsgrpstg.wpengine.com/?p=375159

Editor’s Note: On July 12, City Dads Group sponsors the Dads4Kesem walk across the UK. Our goal: having our members and friends donate at least $1,000 in total to benefit the creation of the new Camp Kesem chapter at University of Maryland. In this post, one of those Dads4Kesem — and L.A. Dads Group member — Whit Honea writes about why he is making this trek.

Dads4Kesem are 12 fathers -- six of whom are City Dads Group members -- walking across England this month in hope of raising $40,000 to start a Maryland chapter of Camp Kesem, an organization that help children of adults with cancer.

Childhood. We all had one. We were all children and all that comes with it, and the experience thereof has greatly impacted our adult lives and our own parenting in ways that we may not fully understand. That’s where the similarities start to blur.

Many of us may look back upon childhood as an innocent tale of nostalgic wonder, checkered with bits of life lesson and pubescent awkwardness, but for others it might have been a time too full of hardships and obstacles — with varying degrees of loss — leaving childhood not something to cherish, but something they had to tolerate, survive and overcome. Cancer tends to play an active part in those stories, disrupting without rhyme or reason, and holding no regard for youth or the damage done to it.

Cancer is to childhood as cancer is to anything: cruel and destructive, the active march of the darkly uncaring. Most of us, unfortunately, have had our lives touched by cancer, whether we have faced it ourselves or love someone who did. Cancer is far too common, not only affecting those inflicted, but everyone around them. It leaves no stone unturned. Rather, it throws them all, aiming for everything breakable: hearts, bones, promises and windows.

For parents diagnosed with cancer, their journey is many things: unique and difficult, full of pain and a quest for hope, the pondering of so many unknowns, moments that cannot linger long enough and those that won’t go away. No two experiences are the same, but one common factor is the toll upon their children, the changes made and the innocence they are losing.

And while there is no way to fix such things, there is a way to allow those children a week of what once was — a way to enjoy childhood in an environment that embraces their respective experiences by providing a safe place to find those pieces of them grown faded and forgotten. It is a chance for childhood to be fun again.

Camp Kesem does that.

That is why on July 10, 2016, a group of 12 men, of which I am one, each with active voices in the online parenting world, will embark on a different kind of journey — more than 84 miles walking along Hadrian’s Wall in England — to raise donations for a new Camp Kesem chapter at the University of Maryland. The camp will honor the late Oren Miller, who attended Maryland (as did his wife Beth), and whose young children would be able to attend the camp.

hadrians wall map
Dads4Kesem will walk along Hadrian’s Wall, an 80-mile fortification stretching across the northern United Kingdom, in July to raise money for a camp the benefits the children of people with cancer. (Map: http://www.nationaltrail.co.uk/

Oren Miller was one of us. He founded a Facebook group of dad bloggers that has more than 1,000 members, and he shared his passions on life, love and family in endless conversations and written inspiration. He was a good man who lost his battle to cancer, a battle fought with amazing grace, and who has left a legacy behind him. We want to add to it.

The Dads4Kesem are hoping to raise the $40,000 required to start a new camp, and you can help. You can follow us on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram using #Dads4Kesem and #TheWalkingDads to interact with our daily sponsors and the stories we’ll share, and you can make donations directly to our website.

The walk is for Camp Kesem, and it is for Oren — his wife and children, and the lives they have all touched — but it is even bigger than that, bigger than all of us. The walk is for childhood, what it is, can, and hope it should be. It is for a generation of stories yet to be written.

I am honored to be a part of it.

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