Professional Documents
Culture Documents
3/2/19
Journal 7
This week was a week full of catching up and organizing what I have done so far. I spent
the week preparing for my absence this coming week. I made sure to put in a lot of effort and
work in each duty that I am responsible for in order to make sure everyone was set while I was
gone. I restocked files, and our wish closet. I completed a big task that we have not had the time
for lately. I made progress in my seed packet journey! I updated our tree for all of January and
February’s wishes. I had my first breakdown over a welcome call. Next week is my supervisor’s
birthday, so I completely decorated her desk and got her some goodies for her to find on
Monday!
As mentioned before, there are things I am responsible for restocking that are important
for everyone in the office. This includes wish folders that wish coordinators will need when a
family gets their wish granted, shirts, buttons, and luggage tags. This is very time consuming, but
for the wish folders we typically keep 10 of each type (there’s 4 types). I did 30 of each before I
left. They should be set for a while! Another big task for me and my supervisor is space for all of
our files. We have been keeping our own little system, but anyone else would be so confused.
With that being said, I rearranged and put the files she will need closer to her, and the ones I will
be working to complete between the two of us. This freed up a lot of clutter we had and made it
I introduced my seed packet idea to our CEO and other supervisors, and they loved my
idea to spice up our bereavement process. We do not do much at all, so this is a cheap, but huge
improvement even if it seems like it isn’t. I had a meeting with the data tech, and she was able to
estimate just how many packets we would need for a given year. That number came out to
around 50, so we got the approval to purchase 60 seed packets! This will only cost us forty-one
dollars annually but is really thoughtful for the grieving families. We will order them when I get
back in town. I also got all of the new wish files that we are completing and was able to update
our tree to show how many wishes we are already granting this year! It is time consuming to be
responsible for this tree and all of our new wish kiddos, but it is so cool seeing how many kids
This week I did do a lot of catching up, so I finished all of January’s welcome calls,
except a stack of files we cannot get a hold of. This was a lot of files, because this included all of
December’s referrals, so it was double what a normal month should look like. Maybe 50-60 files.
My first welcome call on Thursday was really hard. When you begin a call you get into
character, ready to surprise a family who has been waiting to hear if they got approved or not. I
dial the number, being super cheerful and excited, and the mom lets me know she was already
having a bad day and that her daughter had sadly passed, but I just made her day worse. I
apologized and was completely caught off guard. I thankfully did not freeze up and tried to calm
down the mom explaining that the physician did not inform us. I held it together until I got off
the phone, and I was immediately hugged by one of my coworkers. I turn around and everyone is
like tearing up, and asking if I was okay, and I just cried it out for a little bit. A couple of minutes
later, we found out a rush wish that everyone had been working on very hard, the wish child
passed that day too. So, this was a very sad day, but I learned just how hard it is even if you have
Lastly, I went all out for my supervisor for her birthday. I decorated her desk with
confetti, balloons, and left her a goodie bag with all her favorites! This brought a little bit of
sunshine to a very sad couple of days we had. I am really enjoying the work I am doing for
Make-A-Wish. There are so many good days that outweigh the bad ones, but we are doing
everything we can to make these kids wishes come true every single day. It is hard when you
lose one you have been working so hard on, but at least we did everything we could for them,