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Simply put, the Yard of the Week Contest exists to promote safer, cleaner and healthier neighborhoods through friendly competition. It’s about making people feel good about who they are and where they live. It’s about igniting those “inside forces” that bring success and happiness! Where negative elements like litter, loitering, poor public service, crime, violence, drug and gang activity exist to tear down communities, our aim is to empower residents to take back control of their streets, one yard at a time.
As residents scramble to gain control of their yards, everything else in their lives tends to come under the same positive control! A new hope is awakened and it prevails to chase away blight and despair and anything that would detract from the place people want to feel proud to call home. .........This is Mr. Judy's story........
So, we know that in those areas people just are miserable. The first contest we did was in 1996. We call it a contest because it’s not a program. It’s no program because there’s no government money involved. We give prizes based on effort and ability. The first woman that ever won a prize was 85 years old in a wheelchair, with no legs. Lived in a house trailer. And what she did to win the prize, she talked the local electrical utility into cutting a tree down in her yard. They had no responsibility to cut it down but she hounded them so much. She told them what it was going to do to the house if it fell on the house, but their only responsibility is to keep the power lines clear. She kept messing with them until finally they came out and just took the tree down. So we gave her the prize. It was wonderful. She thought it was delightful. It’s still sitting in the yard. And she loves it.
And then also Molly and Sara and Frances start protecting their domain. And the next thing you know, the whole thing’s working. That’s why you see those pictures on that web page. I took all those pictures. And they loved it. They do love it. What we see is recognition by those people that they are good. And if you recognize that you're good, you might as well use it. And that’s what they do. I think we’re hitting 10,000 people, maybe 12,000 in the contest areas.
Now I'm white, I'm a cracker. But the only bad experience I’ve had in 10 – 12 years? Zero. They look at me like – we don’t know who you are, but you haven’t caused us any problems. I don’t report what I see to the police either. So I’m not a functionary of the police. No raids come after I come there. I make sure of that. Always exactly what I do is just ride through and hand out these things and leave people proud of themselves. Some of them say – "how come I can’t win?" My answer is "because you haven’t done anything. That’s the number one reason. Why don’t you do something and then next time you can win." And that’s typical. I hear that a lot. And it’s pleasant.
My church sits four blocks from where my contest area is and if you really needed to die and were too chicken to shoot yourself you can go down there at night. Somebody would shoot you. Go on down there. It’s roughhouse. The week before we started in this area which was during the summer they had 100 police officers hit there on the weekend. And they put 21 people in prison, for 25 years or longer. Drug stuff. So it’s roughhouse. Since we started, when I talk to some people, it’s quieter. So the trick to it, if you bring peace back into an area, what will follow is people just doing business. The cost of one contest is $3000. In a neighborhood of 300 houses, that's only about $2 per person. The $2 covers everything. That will cover your signs, prize money, and publications that you put out. And if somebody complains that they’re having a hard time doing one of them, I say, well I fund four by myself. But in
Good way through it, she said, "You know, you were right. Those people when they look at you they thank you. And God bless you." And then she understood. As time goes on, she loved it. Now she’s got some real volunteers who want to get up there and be part of this feeling good about yourself and helping people. It’s got a big reward when you go out there and see these people jumping around and having a good time with life. You see those smiles in those pictures. When’s the last time you had somebody smile at you? It’s roughhouse there in downtown
So if you leave and you come back wondering if your plant grew, it’s probably what you thought about during the day. And most plants do grow, so you had a success in your life. And once you start this, it’s a new way. And it works. What we’d like to do is have a concept. I’ll tell you about it and you tell your sister about it and she tells your brother in law about it and he tells his uncle about it and his cousin and if you want to do a contest in We know that the worse it is, the better it works. And if you've affected 10,000 people, then you probably could affect 10 million. That’s what I’m looking for. And if you can affect 10 million, you can probably affect 30. And if you can affect 30 million, you can get them all. I think about what happened to the
So if you take the poison – they do have some poison in society when 70% of your children are being born illegitimately, that’s poison. And one in three black males goes to prison, that’s poison. There’s nothing about that that is good. If you’re feeling bad about yourself, you're in a prison. And so if you learn how to free yourself, then you’re free. On that same exact minute. Once you feel good about yourself, then that’s it. All of us are gonna die. I haven’t seen anybody yet who didn’t die. So we all gonna die. We know that when we’re born. So it’s what we’re doing in the process. Once you wake up. You feel good. Your flowers are blooming. You got it all over the front yard. We get some old ladies got ten signs in the yard at a time – or more. Eventually we quit giving the signs cause you just get too many signs. I gave one to one lady, it was probably her twelfth. Lined up straight like soldiers in the yard. And she’s had a stroke since we started. And she has seven grandchildren and then she had a stroke and had to do something about the children. But those signs were her higher diplomas. Probably the only ones she got. If you start out – say you did one in your neighborhood. The first year you would get somebody to help you. It becomes the two of you versus 300 of them. Them being 300 houses. That’s the first year, but as you move through the first year, at the end of the first year, you’ve created 80 winners. So at the end of that time, 82 teachers, each one being a teacher. Next year you go in, you start out with 82 teachers and then you’re down to 220 students. Assuming the second year you have 40 new winners and 40 repeat winners, the next year your 82 goes to 122. Eventually everybody becomes a teacher. And that’s just in the yard cleanup. Anytime you develop one good habit it leads to another. Next you go to work with a good attitude, you do better at work. Then they pull you aside and say you really have done a good job. Next thing you know you’re the boss. And then because the collective mind changes in your neighborhood, the next thing you know, crime doesn’t have a place in your neighborhood. And that’s what we’re seeing. All of this is about the human psyche. That’s all it is.
They want their momma to win. Because winning is not something they've had. So what we added was the grade contest. If you’re a 13 year old black girl living with a crack cocaine mom in one of those neighborhoods, and mom had a different man every night. And then when the fellow got through with mom, because you were 13 years old, he might want to deal with you too. So you escape him during the night, hiding and doing what you gotta do. You get to school the next day and what are you going to know about Shakespeare? Wordsworth, Longfellow? You’re working on a different time schedule than the other kids – the time schedule is you gotta get home. I gotta see what mom’s going to be doing with crack cocaine. And your time horizon is just different from people generally in school.
So, these children – one little girl – you’ll see them in those pictures – one little girl, last couple of years, made ten improvements in grades. I paid her fifty bucks. Took a picture. She was 16. We didn’t know what she would do the next time. So the next time around, she dropped nine grades. I’m glad it happened – I learned something from it. You can do it and win, or you don’t. We’re not going to talk about it. And we don’t. We don’t embarrass anybody about anything. What we finally realized was her younger sister always made good grades. She got sick and tired of Momma hugging her younger sister. So she said – watch this. To You never get away from living life. But she will at least get out of the pit. She’ll know that her life is her option. That’s what your life is, I’m guessing, its your option. My life is my option. That’s as high as I can get it. At some point you have to figure it out yourself. I’ve figured mine out. And that’s what we live life for, I think. So, in her case, she lost – she threw it out the door. I don’t think she meant to. Now that she came up complaining to me I said, “Whoa! Look at that. We got a picture of you. Go cry to somebody else right now.” And she would have to grin because she knows she can do anything. That’s what we have to see. So the grade contest is different from the yard contest. We’re still experimenting around with it.
Anyway it’s pleasant and it’s fun. And what you’re finding out is that these people are great. You can do it in any city. And that’s what I’m trying to do. It’s game, but it’s fun. I know darn well you can make the people happy. Happy people don’t go to jail. They don’t beat on anybody. Happy people don’t cause problems. They help the problems. So you create happy people. But you don’t create anything. You give them rewards and they find it within themselves.
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