I’m a member of the local Chinese service club. I’m not Chinese, but my wife is, and my membership is through her.
I buy their peanuts every Xmas for gifts, but by the time I get to where I mailed them they’re eaten up and everyone has peanut breath.
Having been “voluntold” to be a member of service organizations for the past 20 years (“It’ll look good on your performance reports–you need some volunteer service!”) I’ve taken a hiatus from them.
I don’t know much about the Masons, the Kiwanis, the Rotary Club, nor the Eagles/Moose/Elks/Insert Animal Here.
I would very much like to jump back in as a Scoutmaster to the local Troop, bur for now, I’m sticking with the VFW.
Tripler
It’s a zoo out there.
The Mrs. and I are (similar to Tripler) members of a veterans service club. American Legion for us though. We were brought in by her uncle to help break up a power lock in his Post that was slowly stifling the chapter into non-existence. Within weeks, we were being courted for membership in a more exlusive “club within a club” and being groomed for a leadership positions at the district level as well as being actively recruited for leadership positions in a local organization composed of representatives of all the various veterans organizations. We’re still members of our original American Legion Post, but much less active, we just don’t have the time for all the stuff they want us to do.
I had a friend who was a Mason. He told me one of their rules was that they can’t actively recruit anyone. They can’t ask you if you want to be a Mason; you have to ask them.
I believe to join the Knights of Columbus, you have to be a Catholic.
The Chinese service club I belong to is actually pretty evenly divided between men and women, maybe slightly more women. And by the way, it has no religious requirement.
Well sort of. The masons I used to know would discuss all the fun activities they were doing with the “hope” that maybe one of us would ask about joining.
I’m 38 and a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Our lodge has quite a few members who are in their 20s and 30s, many of whom are also Masons.
I have a friend (late 40s) who joined her local Rotary solely for the purpose of making business contacts. Her particular group is quite active and does a lot of charity events. Don’t know if they’ve tagged her for any committees yet, though.
A good friend of my husband’s (mid 50s) is active with his local Jaycees as an advisor. He’s also their social media person so he’s always posting photos and writing up what the kids have been doing lately.
My husband’s former coworker is active in the Masons. He’s in his early 50s. I believe he’s the second youngest in his lodge.
OCA?
I had a friend who was in the Odd Fellows. I remember they had a lodge with bowling alley that was above the retail stores in an older downtown shopping block.