Positively Kind
Lena Ford was 7 when she started Arting for You. She collected art supplies. Then she donated them to kids in foster care and homeless shelters in and around her hometown of Marietta, Georgia. “My granny always wanted to give back,” Lena, now 15, told TIME for Kids. “I was inspired by that.”
COURTESY TRESSIE BLOODWORTHTwo years later, she launched Positively Lena. It sells products with uplifting messages. One product is a book she wrote to help kids deal with bullying. “The world can be a really tough place,” Lena says. “My goal is to spread positivity.” She also offers workshops. She teaches creative writing, entrepreneurship, and scrapbooking. Part of the money she earns goes to her charitable efforts.
COURTESY TRESSIE BLOODWORTH
Lena has another project. It’s called Kinship Family Initiative. She and her mom cofounded the nonprofit in 2022. The group helps kids who are being raised by a family friend or a relative other than a parent. “My mom and her brothers were raised in kinship care,” Lena says. She assembles “positivity pouches.” She packs them with school supplies and books.
COURTESY TRESSIE BLOODWORTH
“Honestly, it makes me feel really happy,” Lena says. “And that’s my motivation to keep doing what I’m doing: knowing that I’m making a difference and knowing that I’m making [people] happy.”
Kindness Counts
Kindness is powerful. Lena knows this. You probably do too. Think about it. How does it make you feel when someone does something nice for you? How does it feel to help someone?
Studies show that giving and receiving kindness are good for us. They boost our mood. They reduce stress. They give us a more positive outlook. And they help us connect with others. Research also suggests that kindness can be contagious. A person who receives an act of kindness is more likely to show kindness to someone else.
COURTESY TRESSIE BLOODWORTH
“Kindness means just making someone happy,” Lena says. “It can even be something as small as giving someone a compliment: ‘Hey, your shirt looks nice.’ Something just like that can make someone smile. It doesn’t have to be a grand gesture.”
Party Time
Every few months, Lena hosts a packing party at a shop called the Book Worm. “I found that’s the best way to get the community involved,” she says. Kids and teens volunteer their time to pack positivity pouches and Embrace Their Roots kits, which contain African-American hair products for kids in foster care. People are “coming out, they’re having fun,” Lena says of her squad.
COURTESY TRESSIE BLOODWORTHLena hopes more people take action to spread kindness. “If we want to grow up with kind people surrounding us, then we need to be kind to others,” she says. “You never know how [you] can impact someone else.”
Inspired?
Let Lena’s story inspire you to spread kindness in your own community. Click below for ideas about how you can make a positive difference.