Episode Transcript
M Taking a Walk Nashville.
Speaker 2Hi everyone, this is Sarah Harrelson, your host of Taking a Walk Nashville, and today I am at Capitol View and Downtown Nashville, which is near the Tennessee State Capitol Building and.
Speaker 3Bi Centennial Capital Mall State Park.
Speaker 4Joining me here is Emily Winters, the CEO of Strings for Hope, and organization in Nashville that employee survivors of interpersonal violence to create guitar string jewelry out of recycled musical instrument strings.
Emily, thank you so much for being here today.
So we're not in the usual workspace of Strings for Hope, are we We are not.
Speaker 3We are at a temporary office as ours is closed.
Uh yeah, leaver kicked out of our building what about a month ago?
So yeah, yeah, we'reated in Germantown, GEA, in the heart of Germantown.
We love, we love Germantown, one hundred Taylor Street.
Yeah.
So, due to some fire code issues, we have been temporarily displaced with eighty two other small businesses.
So we are so grateful to Capital View They've allowed us to be in one of their spaces and still looking.
So yeah.
Speaker 4Well, I definitely hope people can support your cause while you guys are transitioning into a new workspace.
So let's talk about the start of Strings for Hope.
It was established in twenty ten, but you actually took the role of CEO in twenty seventeen at a very young age.
Speaker 3So how did you get involved with this organization?
I love that you have all of that information readily available.
Bossis Sarah getting it right and correct.
It's a very interesting story, and I know I told you a few times on different places, but yeah, I got involved as the first little cart Girl is what we called ourselves.
It was me and another guy named Devin, and she was my best friend and she got me involved in Strings for Hope.
She was going to Belmont University and Strings for Hope was working with Belmont at that time with a program with students and she was a part of that, and she got me involved and we started selling guitar string jewelry, which was at the time a craft and an interesting like project to give back to the community through food banks and medical clinics and schools and so not what Strings for Hope is today at all.
But it's been so incredible to be a part of the transition to what it is now.
Speaker 4M h.
Yeah, and you were very young when you got involved, So did you have another career path in mind or did you just right away have a passion for this organization.
Speaker 3Girl, Now, I had no idea what hap to doing.
I oh, let's see, gosh, it's not like I had my jobs I had.
I had like two before this, So I was a walking cliche of Nashville.
I was teaching line dancing at the World Times Wildhorse Saloon Rip, and I was selling cowboy boots at the buy one, get two pair free place Love It.
And that's honestly where I connected with Devin.
We worked together.
She's still my best friend today.
And that was that was what I was doing.
I didn't have I didn't go to college.
I was nineteen, so at this point it's twenty fifteen when I got involved with Strings, and it just yeah, it was just an opportunity.
I was doing all of the different things.
But I will say I've always known that I'm not meant for a conventional, normal job.
I've always enjoyed doing things that can just take me different places, and opportunities to help others has been at my core.
But I don't think I realized that until much later into running the organization.
And so you did grow up in Nashville, you're a unicorner.
Yeah, I am.
I grew out a little outside of Nashville of like twenty thirty minutes.
But but you know, like everyone else, we claim it when we're for that close.
But yeah, I mean I always say that I'm the only one they'll ever meet, you know, that's from here when you're downtown.
When I was working downtown all the time, I'm like, it's just me, I'm the only one from here.
Yeah.
Speaker 4And so when you were just with Devin with the Strings and the cart, did you have to figure out over time like Okay, we need more people on the team, we need marketing And was.
Speaker 3That difficult to grow the company?
Speaker 4Yeah?
Speaker 3I mean it was honestly a little background to that story.
So Strings for Helpe was started by Laura Wilson and her husband, Brook Wilson, and they her husband built guitars and Laura had a full time job at HTA still does, and and that was so this was definitely something that they were wanting to be a a really cool organization, but not as big as what it has become.
I don't think that that was necessarily the goal or in the cards of what they thought would happen.
And so when I and Devin got involved, we we were selling this jewelry downtown.
We were making the jewelry, and we were selling too much, so we were we were just moving the product really well.
And people loved a piece of Nashville, right.
It really started with the strings.
They were like so interested in taking home a piece of music city and that was just such a fun thing for me.
I really saw that excited me that people were able to like connect with the town that I, you know, am from, like where being from here.
Just I'm like, no, you get it.
You get to take home a piece of Nashville.
So it's really cool.
But then fast forward, Yeah, we sold too much.
I'm not great at making jewelry.
And so the idea was that we should start working with one of our local halfway houses in town, a treat and center as well, called the next Door.
So that was the first one that we started working with, and a few other agency partners we started working with, and it was really to have hands to make the product and for others to have job opportunity but it was not the core focus, so that it just evolved over time.
Yeah.
Speaker 4Yeah, and not only does it support a good cause, but it definitely cleans up the planet by recycling guitar strings.
So over the years, how many guitar strings, if you know, have you recycled, and how many survivors have you employed?
So this is always fun because it's like it's a kind of rough guest in it.
Obviously with the strings, like there's so many you've been to our office before her old huffs do there's so many strings, guys, So we've had I mean, we I like to work in pounds because it's a lot easier to like digest and understand.
But it's over ten thousand pounds load strings.
And we do this because we will wait, we know the approximate weight of string, and when we get a bin in, we'll weigh those.
And so it's we weren't even recording that in the beginning of string Wow.
And so now it's been incredible to see and we still are a recycling program.
That's how we like to be viewed as a recycling program for the musicians, a work development program for survivors, and obviously a beautiful product and experience for the public and consumers and customers.
So yeah, and then as far as women, we've had over gosh, at this point, over one hundred and fifty women go through the program.
But the program evolved so before when.
Speaker 3We first started working with survivors, again, the mission wasn't to necessarily focus on them and their work development.
It was to give a job, and that's for to donate money to random, awesome organizations.
But when streamlining that focus and realizing the demographic we were working with, that was my job, right.
I was going in and teaching a lot of these women, and I just realized that there's a lot more opportunity to keep people out of those food banks and create keep people out of those safe houses even by creating financial and emotional autonomy.
And so that evolved over time, and that means we slowed down the program, making it intentional for people to find not just you know, cash for the moment making jewelry, but now a certified jeweler apprenticeship program where they are here for you know, it could be max.
A year to two years, or it could be their whole career.
Like it just depends on what people want and we're there to help them through that journey.
Yeah, that's great.
They can take that certification and you know, use it anywhere.
Yeah, yeah, and it's it's We're really grateful to the Apprenticeship State Office of Tennessee because for them to come through and be like, the work you're doing with guitar strings actually is great work.
And look is it's jewelry.
Like they valued it that much.
And notice that we're doing the same skills with soldering and micro wilding and doing all the things that we do.
It was just validation of years of hard work of wanting to create something more quality.
M hmm.
Yeah.
Speaker 4And the cause definitely pulls on your heart strings as well.
Can you share a story with us that just resonates you of a time that strings for hope, save someone, maybe someone's specific story.
Speaker 3Yeah.
I mean I feel like I always get weary about like using the word like saved or like helped people.
But because I really do believe that as survivors and women in this space like we do, that we make the choice right this that was the whole that was a shift for me is realizing that this is a choice for myself and for them, and so that's us taking that step in that leap to save ourselves and create a path forward.
So I feel like it's evolved so much.
But in the there's so many, too many good stories to bring up.
But I guess I can.
I can kind of talk about one individual for the sake of her privacy, I won't like use her name, but there's been individuals that have all struggled with, you know, substance use.
We work with survivors of substance use, trafficking and domestic interpersonal violence, and so this specific story kind of touches on more of that, that trafficking side of things, and it's not Recovery is not linear, and I think we all kind of know that, but I feel like as someone in this space, a leader in the space, we need to talk about that a lot more.
You know, we need to say like, it's not linear, and we want to support our team as they're they're evolving and growing through through Strings.
But this one particular person, she had gotten out of treatment and started working with Strings for Hope, so she was still in a residential partnered facility.
We work with many partners still and having that those case managers to work with and so she started working with Strings for Hope and she was doing okay.
She wasn't like picking it up really quickly.
She kind of didn't seem ready to come out of the life.
And we say that we use that term a lot in our space, but like, she didn't, she doesn't seem ready to come out of the life.
And unfortunately she ended up running, leaving the facility and going back out, and honestly, I didn't think we would see her again.
It's it's scary, you know, going back to your views her and I was like, okay, she's gone.
Hopefully we can help the next person that comes through.
Fast forward.
It was probably like a year later this individual comes back through our program and has was just a different person completely and is still to this day thriving.
It was like the most beautiful thing to see is someone just wasn't ready had to go back out, and obviously we all don't want that, but for her to come back and feel safe to even do this program again was just like a testament to like our work and what we do.
And so's she's killing it.
She's a leader at Strings.
And I think that I bring her up so much because I think she's just like.
Speaker 4Such a great example.
And for many people in our organization, this might be the only job they've ever had.
Speaker 3So this is just definitely something that in someone that I'm so incredibly proud of, and I definitely feel like us being a safe place for her helped contribute to her saving her own life.
It's beautiful.
Speaker 4And he recently partnered with the nonprofit organization Infinite Possibilities and actually announced this partnership when we collaborated on a benefit show with Women behind the Lyrics.
How has this partnership with Infinite Possibilities helped your employees?
Speaker 3Oh my gosh, I'm so happy you're bringing that up.
It's been the biggest thing that ever happened, I think with Strings for Hope, I'm so grateful for Rhonda who runs Infinite Possibilities and yeah, now Strings for Hope nonprofit arm.
She's licensing the name and we're combining and joining forces even in a bigger and better way.
What Infinite Possibilities aka Strings for Hope does is supports the survivors in so many different ways and so not just it shrinks for Hope.
So she will help with emergency financial relief for survivors partnering with so many different agencies, including our local government agency, Office of Family Safety, and will provide transportation for survivors that are trying to get to court, filling intentional gaps that you don't think about.
But I'll tell you who does.
Those women that are terrified to show up to court and see their abuser or you know, trying to figure out how to even get to a job, and they have to have kids, and they have to leave early, and they have so many things, and as a company, I can't always provide PTO that extends outside of our realm of work development boundaries, if you will.
And so that's where Rhonda comes through and she sees the situation as a whole and how she can not just give you know, a financial relief or something to help them, but something that will help continue to move the needle for survivors.
And so she's been such a great asset to this state, to be honest with you.
She also helps fund our phase one of our work development program.
So that's where we go into those facilities.
We literally meet women where they're at physically, mentally, and emotionally, and so we are focusing on so much more than jewelry.
We're focusing on showing up for yourself, resume building, financial literacy, things that as a job you don't think that would That'd be amazing if you were at a job and they invested in you that much.
And investing in people is expensive, but it's worth it.
And so that's our goal is with the nonprofit arm to assist in that investment and those skills.
We're able to pay survivors what they deserve and keep moving the needle for the jewelry process.
And also just our journey with working with so many different industries here in Nashville.
Yeah, yeah, Ron, it's amazing.
Yeah, it was amazing to see how Strings for Hope has evolved over the years and has helped the Nashville community.
You know, we talked about how you started in this organization at a young age.
So what advice would you give to.
Speaker 4Maybe young professionals wanting to start their own company or go out on their own with an organization.
Speaker 3My gosh, I love that question.
I've recently become really passionate about this generation like that's coming up, which makes me feel definitely old, and I know I'm not, but I feel very I feel jaded, but I feel so like passionately about young people doing.
Knowing what they want to do is not the goal, but knowing how to ask questions is my goal for young people.
Because when I first took over Strings for Hope, I was scared of many things and I didn't ask for help.
Within my first year of taking over the company, the team member passed away of an overdose and another one ended up leaving and kind of taking all of our jewelry designs and running with it on our own.
And so there was a lot of pain and fear that developed from that, and I was so young that I was really affected by it.
And I will say that if I had any advice, it would be to endure those kind of things and pig up yourself and go down the road and ask another business leader for help, because I think we would have been much further along if I did that.
And I will say I definitely do that now.
Yeah, I ask so many people for help.
I'm like, do you have advice on this?
Or I've done taxes wrong so many times, so if anyone has advice.
But I also think being open to the mentorship, yes, is really important.
I think lean into the things that you're scared of.
I was really fearful that someone else would learn about our designs and then go and do it again and kind of steal the concept.
And so what do I do now?
I created an apprenticeship jewelry program so they could become jewelers themselves.
It's just leaning in to the things that scare you.
So that's that's probably yeah, big advice.
Yeah, that's that's great advice.
Speaker 4And I always ask this question on taking a walk in Nashville, and this is a good one to ask since you're a Nashville.
Speaker 3Native, But do you have a favorite place to take a walk in Nashville?
Oh my gosh, I have so many places.
I mean, I love does Percy Warner count Oh yeah, Edmund Warner, park, Edwin Warner, Percy Warner.
I love it out there.
If I'm actually going on like a real hike, I would advise everyone to go out there.
I also think that's also advised and for like any human, but just going on a walk.
While this podcast great name, but taking a walk is just it just clears your head.
It is literally the one thing I think that can like fully ground to me.
There's so many great places so definitely Edwin Warner, Percy Warner.
But when I lived in East Nashville, this is a funny one.
I would walk in that cemetery like next She's like kind of creepy, but y'all it's pretty.
So just go there and you'll see what I mean.
My friend Devin, we keep bringing her up, but she showed me the cemetery, and because she used to do the same thing and we would, I walked over there and I just loved it.
I thought it was beautiful.
It's over there by sip cafe okay, like going in the into Madison, So it's a pretty big cemetery.
It's huge.
I think it's like, think, I know which one you're on the right.
Everyone is like shaking their head while listening to this podcast.
I know which one.
It's right there on the right Sip cafes like across the street or something by Bridley Parkway, okay, in East Nashville off of Gallatin, And I'm telling you, it is so pretty like the sunset and like you're just like, this is beautiful.
There's so many good places, and Nashville's great.
I love the unconventional.
I know, the weirdest thing ever, also, I love coffee, so anywhere in your coffee shops, probably outside a walk.
You know, we have a ton of good coffee shops in Nashville for sure.
So lastly, what's.
Speaker 4Next for Strings for Hope?
Where can people send in their used instruments strings right now and get involved with Strings for Hope.
I know you're in a temporary space, so I don't know if there's a better place for people to.
Speaker 3Send in strings right now.
Yeah, yeah, So if you go to our website, we're actually updating it right now, but seeing where our drop off locations are, so we have different local music shops you could support them too, but you can also go bring your strengths there.
So one place that is going to be doing that as Carter Vintage Guitars, and there's so many different places.
But also you can still drop them off with us and ship them to our old office.
We are still picking up packages from there and that's hundred Taylor.
You can see all of that information on our website Strengthsfohope dot com.
There's also a link that's as like Recycling Programs for learning how to be a part of our recycling program.
We would love to like highlight those musicians.
What's next, I mean, I think right now it's holiday season, so we are definitely because we're in such an interesting spot and we've definitely I know I've expressed you had some loss of income on loss of wages because of the situation.
We are really trying to level up for holidays.
So we are trying to give as much as opportunity for the survivors to work right now, and that means selling a lot of product.
Yeah, so we are going to be launching some deals online and we're going to be everywhere that we can.
So really just being involved in that way is always.
Purchasing is always good.
Or of course you could donate to our nonprofit if you don't want to purchase any jury or you're like I own your entire collection.
There's a lot of people like that.
We are working on new designs, but you can donate to our nonprofit arm which where we're doing so many different campaigns.
And one thing that we are working on right now is benefits.
The loss of STAP benefits is affecting so many people in Nashville, including some of our family members and team members.
So we are going to hopefully be able to do some things through a nonprofit there too.
Yeah, yeah, that's great.
Speaker 4I hope listeners can support your cause by just donating to infinite possibilities, buying product on strings for hope, I have some cute pieces on today, and even just shipping in use guitar strings no matter where you live.
So thank you so much Emily for being on Taking a Walk Nashville today.
Speaker 3Thank you, Sarah, You're the best.
Speaker 1Thanks for listening to Taking a Walk Nashville with singer songwriter Sarah Harrelson.
And check out our other podcasts, Music Save Me, Comedy Save Me, and Taking a Walk.
Available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
