What Does It Mean to Belong?
Every month, as we begin planning this newsletter, I start noticing patterns.
Sometimes they emerge through conversations with nonprofit leaders. Sometimes they come from podcast interviews, community meetings, or simply paying attention to what's happening around Bonner County.
This month, one word kept finding its way back to me.
Belonging.
At first, I didn't realize it.
We interviewed Dr. Sarah Lynch from the North Idaho Pride Alliance about creating spaces where people can be their authentic selves.
We sat down with three nonprofit leaders to talk about the hidden face of homelessness and the importance of truly seeing the people around us.
We spoke with veterans, artists, and community builders who reminded us that service doesn't end when one chapter of life closes—it simply finds new expression.
On the surface, those seem like completely different conversations.
But the more I reflected on them, the more I realized they were all answering the same question.
What helps a person feel like they belong?
Belonging isn't just about fitting in.
It's about being seen.
It's about knowing someone cares enough to listen.
It's about finding purpose after a difficult season.
It's about discovering a community that welcomes your gifts and gives you opportunities to share them.
Sometimes belonging begins with a conversation.
Sometimes it begins with someone saying, "I see you."
Sometimes it begins with a mentor, a volunteer, a neighbor, or a new friend who simply shows up.
As I listened back to this month's interviews, I realized every guest was describing the same kind of community—one where people don't have to navigate life alone.
At the Community Resource EnVision Center, we often talk about connecting people with resources.
But the truth is, resources are only part of the equation.
The real goal has always been connection.
Because resources solve immediate needs.
Relationships change lives.
That idea was reinforced in June in ways that extended far beyond our podcast studio. We were honored to receive an AARP Community Challenge Grant that will improve access to the EnVision Center through a new SPOT bus shelter, bench, route map, and wayfinding signage. Our annual EnVision Invitational brought together golfers, volunteers, sponsors, and supporters to invest in the future of our community. The Mountain West Bank team transformed one of our walls into a vibrant mural that welcomes everyone who walks through our doors. And we celebrated recording our 100th episode of A Little Birdie Told Me—one hundred conversations that have introduced us to the remarkable people working every day to strengthen Bonner County.
Individually, those are accomplishments.
Together, they tell a story.
A story about creating places where people feel welcome.
About organizations choosing collaboration over competition.
About neighbors investing in neighbors.
About building a community where everyone has the opportunity to connect, contribute, and thrive.
As our nation begins celebrating America's 250th anniversary, I've found myself thinking less about what makes us different and more about what brings us together.
Maybe that's the real measure of a healthy community.
Not that we all share the same experiences.
But that we share a commitment to seeing one another, serving one another, and making room for one another.
That's the Bonner County I see every day.
And it's the one I'm excited to keep building—together.
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