|
-
11th February 10, 05:38 PM
#1
Perhaps along with thinking about whether it is worth it or not, maybe thinking about what you can do in support of a volunteer organization you choose to belong to. I was working in my clan tent during a festival and a lad came up and said he was looking for his clan, but they weren't there. He was a bit upset about it. My collegue asked if he was a member of the clan and he said no. She then said, well, perhaps the clan is off looking for you?
Another similar situation came up at another festival with a lad looking for his clan. He also was upset there was no presence for his clan--to which the same collegue replied, "well, you're here aren't you?".
[I][B]Ad fontes[/B][/I]
-
-
11th February 10, 08:43 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by Detroitpete
Perhaps along with thinking about whether it is worth it or not, maybe thinking about what you can do in support of a volunteer organization you choose to belong to. I was working in my clan tent during a festival and a lad came up and said he was looking for his clan, but they weren't there. He was a bit upset about it. My collegue asked if he was a member of the clan and he said no. She then said, well, perhaps the clan is off looking for you?
Another similar situation came up at another festival with a lad looking for his clan. He also was upset there was no presence for his clan--to which the same collegue replied, "well, you're here aren't you?".
Well said.
T.
-
-
15th February 10, 09:26 AM
#3
It is easy to say that what you get is directly in proportion to what you put in, but it does not address the question. Some clan societies are well organized and viable, while others merely exist. I filled out contact forms at two clan tents last summer, and I am still waiting to be contacted. I have also been waiting for six months for a mere response from the local St. Andrew's society, after an existing member facilitated the initial contact. I followed up on that contact last week, but still nothing. I doubt that I will followup again. On the other hand, I recently joined the newly formed local lodge of a very established organization. There is a lot of room for improvement in the way that the local lodge operates, but the officers and members encourage input. I helped with a project about a week after joining, and I will continue to be involved.
-
-
15th February 10, 10:34 AM
#4
 Originally Posted by Lyle1
It is easy to say that what you get is directly in proportion to what you put in, but it does not address the question. Some clan societies are well organized and viable, while others merely exist. I filled out contact forms at two clan tents last summer, and I am still waiting to be contacted. I have also been waiting for six months for a mere response from the local St. Andrew's society, after an existing member facilitated the initial contact. I followed up on that contact last week, but still nothing. I doubt that I will followup again. On the other hand, I recently joined the newly formed local lodge of a very established organization. There is a lot of room for improvement in the way that the local lodge operates, but the officers and members encourage input. I helped with a project about a week after joining, and I will continue to be involved.
Your right, some responses didn't really answer my question. Volunteering and participating come after joining. My question was tell me your experiences if you have joined one of these groups and whether it was worth the cost. Maybe I needed to be more specific in what I was asking.
Thanks
-
-
15th February 10, 12:31 PM
#5
Short answers:
When I joined Clan Murray, the answer is yes.
When my fair lass joined Clan Scott, she would answer YES!!!
Neither of these is very expensive, btw.
Dan
-
Similar Threads
-
By Uncletom in forum Show us your pics
Replies: 22
Last Post: 24th August 09, 02:17 PM
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks