community projects

Youth Dreaming Session at Maywood Public Library

We invited our youth to share their thoughts and ideas, as we are working towards co-creating a new design for the teen space at The Maywood Public Library.

Both our Community Engagement Coordinator, Jess, and our Program Assistant, Itzel, opened the session with a community circle. Everyone wrote down their names, then shared them along with a word that started with the same first letter of their name to describe how they want others to feel when they walk into a shared space. We followed with a name-memory game that helped break the ice as well. Then, we shifted to discussing the teen space. The youth split into three small groups to brainstorm ideas and share with one another what they wanted. Each group explored questions like:

  • What makes a space feel welcoming?

  • What colors and furniture would you like to see?

  • What other things would make the space feel more comfortable?

After sharing, everyone came back together, and each team presented their ideas. Some shared about wanting bean bags, games, and others said snacks and fuzzy carpets. It was great to see the youth excited about participating and sharing their vision. Thank you to the Maywood Public Library for providing a space to connect with our youth.

Community Circle | September

This community circle was the first session for our Fall 25 programming season! Each new member was able to create a meaningful name tag to represent their identity. Then, community members moved toward circle where they first got to know each other through a competitive game. After, each person shared their talking piece. This piece is inspired on their own cultural practices. The talking piece is then placed into the middle of the circle and used later to center everyone’s focus on the person currently sharing. Thank you to our Proviso neighbors who showed up this evening!

This program is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council.

PMSA | MHC: Bracelet Making

In honor of Suicide Prevention Month, inspirational bracelets were made with students of Proviso Math and Science Academy. With beads, charms, and string, each unique bracelet was made as a reminder of strength, care, and community. Some bracelets were made for themselves, and others were made for friends and family: the people who keep them going. Each bracelet carries a message that you are heard and you are seen.

This program is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council.

Doll Making Workshop

In our recent Doll Making Workshop, Yekseny Guerrero, MA, ATR-P explained the tradition and the history of the worry dolls. These worry dolls originated from Guatemala and Mexico, and it was a way to help anxious children and to help with their worries. Yekseny shared a story about a princess who would make her own worry dolls when she had fears. She would tell her worry dolls her fears and worries and would place them under her pillow; mindfully get those worries out of your body right before heading to sleep. After the story, each participant had post-it notes to write down their own worries.

Throughout the workshop, each person was making their own very worry doll, each being unique from another. Near the end, Yekseny started another conversation by asking questions like what colors were chosen, how tight the wrapping was during the process of making the doll, what direction the wrap was going, and the name of each doll. All these questions made everyone think more about the process of it all.

By the end of the workshop, the room was filled with laughter, scraps of fabric, and the new worry dolls that were made. This workshop was a celebration of creativity, culture, and connections - and now you have your own worry doll to hold and speak to and remind you that your worries don’t have to stay tucked inside.

This program is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council.

Volunteer Night

During Volunteer Night, Jessica, our Community Engagement Coordinator, prepared Mental Health Kits, and with the help of our amazing volunteers! We separated and packed the stickers and fidget game consoles that will also be included in each Mental Health Kit.

As we continue to prepare our Mental Health Kits for our next Volunteer Night, we would like others to know that these kits will be distributed in September in honor of Suicide Prevention Month. Our goal is to pass out 500 kits this semester!