The mission of Molly is to mint agents of the good by paying them to do their thing and to give.
My view is that “good” is trusting you do not have to be good (see Mary Oliver, Wild Geese) and then doing your thing in service of others, in service of the world.
I do not pretend I live up to that formula more than most nor as much as I would like.
I can imagine an Apple executive saying “but think of all the jobs we provide.”
I know everyone thinks themselves good; the person who conducts an auto de fe does so thinking it for the best.
Still, “the shape of goodness is all wrong,” as Liz says.
Which means, if nothing else, we need new shapes, that we cannot make new wine from old wineskins.
School and business and institutions cannot be “a little different,” cannot be the shapers we need until they crack themselves in half or recast themselves, go from box to sphere.
Caroline says: “Belief is the excuse the head gives for the hands not to help.”
That bears repeating: Belief is the excuse the head gives for the hands not to help.
The shape of good? It comes with less rhetoric, more action.
Your thing, tangible as hands that help.