Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mothers, sons bond over service

League fosters relationsh­ips with projects to aid community

- MELISSA GUTE

BENTONVILL­E — Sherri Esarte processed over coffee with a friend early this spring how her relationsh­ip with her teenage son was changing as he got further into high school.

“It’s all about the kids and then you hit this, to me it was almost like you hit this wall and all of the sudden it’s different,” the mother of a high school sophomore and an eighth-grader said about raising her boys. “It’s just them growing up but it’s like, ‘Oh crap, they don’t really want to spend time with me.’”

Esarte knew this was common between mothers and sons, but it was also a realizatio­n time with them was limited before post-high school life took them on new adventures.

“There were fewer opportunit­ies where we did things together and have a conversati­on about it,” Esarte said.

Esarte’s friend suggested she look into the Young Men’s Service League, a national organizati­on where mothers and sons engage in service projects and activities that give back to the community while enhancing their relationsh­ip.

Esarte got on the phone with the organizati­on’s national president and co- founder Pam Rosener, who invited Esarte to a training in Dallas only a couple

weeks after their conversati­on. Esarte went to the training with two other Northwest Arkansas moms, Wanda Meinhardt and Nicole Nolan.

“They just bonded with their kids,” Meinhardt said of the women she met at the training. “When they (sons) get to that age, they’re into girls and driving and dad … This way we get to spend time with them. That part was really appealing to me.”

Meinhardt is the mother of twin boys, ages 15.

The women came back and founded the Ozark chapter of Young Men’s Service League, which now has 40 moms and 44 sons involved. Esarte is the chapter president and Meinhardt is the vice president of philanthro­py.

It’s the organizati­on’s first Arkansas chapter. The national league was founded in 2001. It had 6,283 moms and 6,689 boys in 75 chapters in 11 states as of August, according to informatio­n provided by local chapter leaders.

The organizati­on is open to mothers and high-school age sons. The program requires a minimum of 20 hours of service throughout the year and participan­ts can sign up for what fits their availabili­ty and interest. Hours served can also be tracked on the website.

The chapter is working with 17 community groups and nonprofit groups. Some activities are repeating while others are held on an as-needed basis of the organizati­on, Meinhardt said.

Activities can include such activities as painting, yard work, assisting with special-needs children and playing bingo with the elderly.

“It depends on the organizati­on and what their needs are,” Esarte said.

In addition to volunteeri­ng, the sons will have monthly meetings where they develop leadership skills and learn a variety of life skills from public speaking to budgeting to cooking and car maintenanc­e. Mothers will also have meetings where they can network and connect, the Ozark chapter leaders said.

Tamara Mondello became interested in the league because it was a great opportunit­y to show her sons the importance of giving back to the community as well as spending meaningful time with them making memories, she said.

“As they get older, we don’t do that as much because they’d rather go hang with dad,” she said.

It’s common for boys in their adolescent years to gravitate toward their fathers, said Jeremy Stark, mental health profession­al with Ozark Guidance.

“It’s natural for them to be around other men or do things that other men are into to try to find themselves and who they are,” he said.

Teenage brains are trying to learn from experience but don’t have much life experience to learn from so they learn from those around them, Stark explained. While teenage boys are picking up cues from their fathers and other men in their lives about what it means to be a man, that doesn’t negate mothers still have much to offer their sons, he said.

Mondello’s sons — Alex, 14, and Austin, 15, initially weren’t too excited about joining, they said Saturday morning during a pause in their weeding work at Restoratio­n Village, a nonprofit organizati­on providing longterm housing to women and children in crisis.

Their hesitancy turned to excitement after the first meeting held a couple weeks ago, where they saw other boys their ages and learned more about the program.

“The more we thought about it, the better it became because we realized the benefits of volunteeri­ng” such as adding the experience to a college resume and the good feeling one gets by giving back, Austin Mondello said. “Helping out other people, it’s the right thing to do.”

The brothers said it’s also an opportunit­y to be with their mom and meet other people.

Restoratio­n Village was the Mondellos’ first stop of a weekend of volunteeri­ng. They were also going to help at the Northwest Arkansas Women’s Shelter later Saturday and possibly play bingo with residents of Jamestown Nursing and Rehab on Sunday.

“I’m hoping that the boys will grow to love giving back,” Mondello said. “I want them to experience what its like to give to others without expecting anything in return.”

Membership dues vary depending on a few factors but are around $150 per mother/ son pair. There are scholarshi­ps and sponsorshi­ps available so the membership dues should not be a deterrent for someone wanting to participat­e, the leaders said. Both the mother and son need to be involved.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF ?? Nicholas Pleiman, 14, and his mom, Jennifer Pleiman, members of the Young Men’s Service League, clear weeds Saturday at Restoratio­n Village in Little Flock.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF Nicholas Pleiman, 14, and his mom, Jennifer Pleiman, members of the Young Men’s Service League, clear weeds Saturday at Restoratio­n Village in Little Flock.
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF ?? Austin Mondello, a member of the Young Men’s Service League, works Saturday at Restoratio­n Village in Little Flock.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF Austin Mondello, a member of the Young Men’s Service League, works Saturday at Restoratio­n Village in Little Flock.
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF ?? Nicholas Pleiman, 14, and his mom, Jennifer Pleiman, members of the Young Men’s Service League, clear weeds Saturday at Restoratio­n Village in Little Flock.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF Nicholas Pleiman, 14, and his mom, Jennifer Pleiman, members of the Young Men’s Service League, clear weeds Saturday at Restoratio­n Village in Little Flock.

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