Teeniors®: (505) 600-1297
  • HOME
  • HIRE TEENIOR(S) / FAQ's
  • Become a Teenior | FAQs
  • Contact Us
    • Thank you!
  • In the News (Press)
  • About
  • Digital Inclusion
  • Gift Certificates
  • Free Classes!
  • Testimonials
  • Resources
  • Founder's Blog
  • Privacy
  • NM Fostering Families
  • Guest Blog
  • HOME
  • HIRE TEENIOR(S) / FAQ's
  • Become a Teenior | FAQs
  • Contact Us
    • Thank you!
  • In the News (Press)
  • About
  • Digital Inclusion
  • Gift Certificates
  • Free Classes!
  • Testimonials
  • Resources
  • Founder's Blog
  • Privacy
  • NM Fostering Families
  • Guest Blog

Founder's Blog

How Will We Move Forward?

1/16/2024

0 Comments

 
Picture
$25/hour.

All Teeniors' high school grads are now paid this. It's the minimum that adult workers need to meet their basic needs. I'm so grateful to have reached this goal. And I assure you, if Teeniors can afford this, corporate employers can too.

Almost every social ill we have stems from poverty. I'm ready for the next evolution - past capitalism - past the scarcity mindset that breeds endless, exploitative growth and competition; where businesses are forced to compete with each other relentlessly, at the expense of the people—the workers—who actually make and do almost everything that turns a profit for the owners.

A higher wage may not be what you need - maybe you need more time off, work-from-home options, healthcare? If you are not getting your needs met and your employers aren't inclined to budge, how can you change your situation? Right now these Teeniors' coaches are contractors who live at home and work just a few hours a week. I want them to know that no matter what their job is in the future, they have the power to get their needs be met.

Albuquerque Business First asked local leaders like myself what can be done to move NM forward. This was after their 2023 survey showed that crime and homelessness were among the top concerns. Changing our ridiculously low minimum wage ($12/hr in NM) was just one of my suggestions. Below is what I wrote. (You can read it on their website here.)

All three of the barriers to moving NM forward — crime, education, homelessness — result directly from poverty. People of means are housed and don’t tend to commit the crimes at issue here; they can send their kids to good schools and supplement that through tutoring and extracurriculars, among other needs. The solution is simple: We commit to meeting the needs of our most impoverished New Mexicans.

As business leaders, how many of us connect with New Mexicans who live and work in different class circles than our own? If our team is already satisfied with their work and compensation, how do we recruit from different neighborhoods to get a variety of applicants? How do we reach out to people of different ages/abilities/incomes to uplift a multifaceted workforce and clientele? How are we connecting with customers who can’t afford our product or service but need it? Are we familiar with B-Corps? Even if we don't seek that certification, do we know the practices they evaluate?

How do we feel about minimum wage? I find it ridiculously low at $12/hour. It contributes to these barriers while perpetuating the cycle of poverty. I pay Teeniors coaches $15-20/hour, and if I can afford that on our revenue, anyone can. By creating a nonprofit arm as a fiscally sponsored initiative, we get to help people who can't afford to pay. Recruiting from diverse neighborhoods through open job fairs creates conversations with people who bring new perspectives to our workplace. In 2016, the Partners for Employment Symposium did a full-day event on hiring people with disabilities that answered the tough questions many of us were thinking.

If as employers we can't pay a full-time, entry-level person a wage that will allow them to meet their material needs, we need to rethink our business model. Every issue we stress about, at its origin, stems from scarcity or a scarcity complex (which exists among both the poor and affluent).

There’s no denying the concerns holding New Mexico back are systemic, but as leaders we can address the needs of individuals, then expand our circles. Getting comfortable with uncomfortable questions and avoiding the desire to shame each other will make a huge impact in moving us forward.
0 Comments

Do You Have A Vision for the New Year?

1/9/2024

0 Comments

 
Picture
Hey, there!

As 2024 loomed, our team gathered to create vision boards identifying our wishes and intentions for the new year. We're doing it again in 2025! Vision boards are a representation of your intentions and goals - typically small to large poster-sized boards, with images and text that you choose to represent the things you're trying to bring into your life. If you'd like to try one for 2025, here's what I recommend:


  • Think about 5-7 things you would like to happen in your life.
  • Find a quiet space to work for a while.
  • Gather 4 things: a poster board or paper; scissors; a glue stick / tape; and magazines.
  • You can get free magazines from local libraries - call ahead to make sure they have some to share. They don't need to be about anything particular - for example, a Costco magazine might have just the right word or photo you need to visualize "healthy," or a tourist magazine can easily represent "strength" or "adventure."
  • Skim through to find words and pics that represent your vision. (For mine last year, I focused on "perfect health" as a big goal - and picked a few visuals to represent good food, exercise, and mental clarity.)
  • The idea is to set your intentions, post them on the board, then hang the board in your home or a room where you'll see it everyday. You'll naturally take active steps toward making those abstract ideas come to fruition through your conscious and subconscious mind. 
  • You don't need to know the "how" to make your goals happen, just set your intentions. No matter what they are (i.e., learning to be more patient, creating a new relationship, traveling more, finding a job you love; speaking kinder or more lovingly to yourself), and watch how the universe helps you manifest these desires in various ways over time. 
Vision boards are a great tool practiced by people from all walks of life - and a beautiful  piece of artwork to have in your home. There really are no rules to how it looks. It's about crafting something that you'll glance at everyday, which will consciously or subconsciously inspire you to realize your dreams and goals. Some focus on specific ideas, others - the bigger picture of what you want your life to look like.

Happy New Year and here's to manifesting your dreams!

​Trish
0 Comments
    Picture

    Archives

    February 2024
    January 2024
    June 2020
    November 2018
    June 2018

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

    Guest Author: 
    Tsiporah Nephesh (2024)​

    Primary Author: 

    Teeniors' Founder
    Trish Lopez (2018-present)
Connect with us on social media!

Teeniors® | (505) 600-1297 | [email protected]

All rights reserved via copyright ©

For the well-being of our team, we reserve the right to refuse instruction to anyone under US federal law.