Purple Heart recipient to speak at Vermont Guardian ad Litem Conference Oct 28

MONTPELIER, Vt. –– A Purple Heart recipient and nationally renown

motivational speaker will make a special presentation at the Vermont Guardian

ad Litem Program statewide conference on Friday, Oct. 28 — at the tail of

Bullying Prevention Month.

Rick Yarosh, a retired U.S. Army sergeant, will speak from 1-3 p.m. at the

conference, scheduled to last from 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. at the Capitol Plaza

Hotel in Montpelier. The media is invited. The theme of the conference is

“Communicating and Connecting.” Organizers invited all 250-275 active

Guardians ad Litem (GALs) from throughout Vermont, as well as other special

guests.

GALs are volunteers that advocate for children in court cases. A judge

appoints a GAL in every child abuse or child neglect case and sometimes in

delinquency and other cases. GALs make recommendations to the court for the

child’s best interests — both in and out of court — until the case

ends. (For more:

https://www.vermontjudiciary.org/programs-and-services/guardian-ad-litem-program)

Yarosh is a husband, father of two and retired U.S. Army sergeant. He’s

also an expert in HOPE (Hold On, Possibilities Exist!). He has toured the

country as a motivational speaker — both solo and with Sweethearts &

Heroes, a student empowerment and empathy activation team directed and

co-founded by Tom Murphy, of St. Albans, Vt. For more than 15 years,

Sweethearts & Heroes, which helps prevent bullying and suicide, has made

presentations to more than 2 million students from New England to Hawaii.

(www.sweetheartsandheroes.com)

Yarosh was deployed to Iraq in December 2005. On Sept. 1, 2006, he was

severely injured by an improvised explosive device (IED) in Abu Ghraib. For

half a year, he recovered at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio,

Texas, fighting through 2nd and 3rd degree burns on more than 60 percent of

his body. His right leg was amputated below the knee. He also lost: both

ears, his nose, multiple fingers, and most of the function in his hands. He

says the only reason he would change that fateful moment is if he could bring

back his brothers in arms that he lost in combat: Sgt. Luis Montes and SFC

Anthony Venetz.

Yarosh has spoken to and inspired millions of people from all walks of life

including sports teams, schools, churches, military groups, and non-profits.

For his heroic service, he received the Purple Heart. For more on Yarosh,

please watch these short, impactful videos:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lqjBwsRO2w

https://vimeo.com/165322201

“HOPE is something that, unfortunately, every kid loses at some point,”

Yarosh says. “Some of those kids get that HOPE back quickly, but then there

are those who never see it possible to ever have HOPE again. When I present

to people, I tell them about all of the times that I lost HOPE. It wasn't

once, it wasn't twice, it was many times. I explain what HOPE means to me —

Hold On Possibilities Exist — and that, without HOPE, I would not be here

today to have found out the possibilities of my future. If I hadn’t held

onto HOPE, there is no way I would be doing what I love today, because I

would have given up long ago.”

Rob Post, program director for the Vermont GAL Program, said: “Janice

Santiago, our regional coordinator serving Chittenden, Franklin and Grand

Isle counties, knew of Sweethearts & Heroes and their presentations about

offering HOPE to children and brought this organization to the attention of

the GAL Program. After meeting with Rick and learning about his story and the

message he could bring to the Guardians ad Litem at our conference, it

didn’t take long to understand his value. Rick, through his personal story

and experience speaking with children across the country, has a unique and

powerful message of HOPE — a key component of what the children we serve

need and what the GALs need. Having Rick speak to our volunteers is a great

way to thank them, energize them, and give them HOPE. Hopefully, they leave

the conference with a renewed belief in the opportunity they have to advocate

for Vermont’s most vulnerable children.”

Post added: “Our almost 300 volunteer GALs across Vermont are dedicated

advocates who come from diverse backgrounds, and all have a unique story, but

what they all have in common is their heart, concern and compassion for

children involved in our courts. Being a volunteer GAL isn’t a traditional

or easy volunteer opportunity. GALs deal daily with many very difficult

situations involving children and families within our system. The COVID 19

pandemic brought and continues to bring lots of changes to the court system

as well as our daily lives. We are excited to return a little bit of a sense

of normalcy by bringing Vermont GALs together at our envisioned annual

statewide conference after a period of years for an educational and inspiring

day.”

For more information on Sweethearts & Heroes, visit:

sweetheartsandheroes.com.

Or watch these short, impactful trailers:

https://youtu.be/SWY6Lr3LWaY

https://youtu.be/RnNW42RPhpQ

On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sweetheartsandheroes/

On YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UChmbRNNgpGWkMRIUxSS-bGg

Event Location

United States