In 1970, at age seven, Lori joined Girl Scouts as a Brownie and enjoyed a fun-filled year. But on learning that Girl Scouts couldn’t go camping until they were Juniors (at the time), Lori, a lifelong Girl Scout who has always known exactly what she wants, didn’t go back until a year later, when she could partake in the camping trips she’d longed to be a part of as a younger girl. She’s been hooked ever since!
Now 54 and a volunteer with Girl Scouts North Carolina Coastal Pines, Lori can’t remember life without Girl Scouting at the center of it.
“When people ask me how Girl Scouts has affected my life, I don’t know what to say. Girl Scouting has been my life since I was seven. It’s always been a part of who I am and what I am.”
When asked what’s played the biggest role in keeping her hooked to the mission all these years, Lori points to all the travel she’s been able to do thanks to Girl Scouts, as well as all of the unique experiences Girl Scouting exposed her to from a young age.
In the sixth grade, when Lori was about 11 years old, she and her family traveled a lot—but being able to travel with her peers, and the independence associated with it, is something she describes as a life-changing confidence booster. “It was just great,” she said, remembering her Girl Scout travel experiences as being very hands-on and girl-led and something that helped bring out the leader in her early in life.
“My family’s travels at the time were smaller scale—within the U.S. I probably would have never left the country had it not been for Girl Scouts.”
As an adult Girl Scout, Lori is fully committed to supporting the organization. Throughout her 35 years of service to the Movement, she’s probably held just about every volunteer role out there. She’s been a troop leader for every grade level, a council facilitator, and an active member of her service unit, and she currently serves on her council’s Girl Scout Gold Award committee.
Recently Lori attended a celebration banquet for the 2017 Gold Award Girl Scouts, where the girls were each given a few minutes to share their projects.
“Sitting on the Gold Award committee, we know what these kids do, but to hear the pride in their voice as they share their projects…I have goosebumps right now just thinking about it,” she said. “As a liaison, I help the girls throughout the Gold Award process, and just to be a little piece of their extraordinary work is so rewarding. I definitely learn from them as much as or more than they learn from me.”
Girl Scouts has always helped Lori pursue leadership without it feeling like a big deal—but more like a given. Of course, she could light that fire at camp as a kid, and travel to Sangam (WAGGGS World Center in India) as an adult volunteer in 1988. She’s a Girl Scout—she can do anything!
“Girl Scouts provides girls with a safe, nurturing environment where they can learn to be leaders, learn to be independent, and learn to be the person that they want to be. The program is just as relevant and important today as it was when I was a Girl Scout.”
Lori’s daughter Sasha followed her mom throughout her own Girl Scout experience, and the lessons she learned continue to help her today, at age 24. “I often say to [Sasha], ‘Remember when you did that in your troop? You were able to handle it then, you could handle it now.’ And then she’ll go, ‘Oh yeah, Girl Scouts taught me that!'"
Her husband, Dan, has also played a key role in Lori’s life of leadership and adventure with Girl Scouts. In fact, the first year the two were married, Dan was Lori’s co-leader of a Girl Scout Junior troop in North Carolina. They never worked together as troop leaders after that (for their marriage’s sake, Lori says!), but Dan has remained incredibly supportive of his wife’s ongoing commitment to an organization that has given her so much. (We reckon he’s a G.I.R.L., too!)
In addition to all of the amazing experiences Girl Scouts has exposed Lori and her family too, it’s given her a lifetime of extraordinary friendships and mentors (like Lofi). In fact, she’s still close to a couple of the volunteers who joined her in India almost 30 years ago.
“I always encourage leaders to focus on travel and connection,” Lori said. “I talk to them about the importance of expanding girls’ horizons through international travel, specifically. I tell them to look into the World Centers and to try and make connections with folks there. (I’ve been to all five, plus Olave House before it became known as Pax Lodge!) I know that these experiences will prove to be as priceless and inspiring for today’s girls as they have been for me.”
Thank you, Lori, for sharing your adventurous, can-do spirit with us and all of the girls whose success you have continued to support over the course of more than three decades. We’re so proud to call you a Girl Scout—today and always!