Math Is Hard said:
YAY, MOONBEAR! I'm glad you're on the job making sure the girls get some cool stuff, too.
p.s. I'll take a busted toe any old day if it means I can hang out with hunky guys in uniforms.
Yep, and the one mom there with all the girlscouts was on board with that too. They had bins of toys for girls and bins of toys for boys, and she and I put a whole bunch of boxes of toys right between the two bins because we decided they didn't have to be one or the other.
Two things amazed me while there. First, just the sheer number of toys donated that are pretty much suited for the 4 to 6 yr olds, and very few toys donated for younger and older kids. I can understand not having too many infant toys donated, because you figure infants don't really know they're missing anything, but not much even for toddlers. The only toddler toys were ones the Toys for Tots program bought with the cash donations.
The other thing that amazed me was just HOW MANY toys were there, and by the end of they day, we had seriously depleted that stock of toys despite having only filled about half the orders we had. That's a LOT of poor kids! They only got two toys each, so it wasn't like these kids are going to have a mound of gifts under the tree even.
But, yeah, hanging out with cute guys all day is a bonus.

The just-out-of-high school kid there who was working off a community service requirement for something he'd been arrested for (probably underage drinking or something like that) was a little more challenging to work with. They had me showing him the ropes. The 10 year old Girl Scouts there were smarter than this high school graduate. They had about a gazillion of these little dorky action figures and packs of some sort of trading cards that were supposed to get added to every order as "stocking stuffer" type things (probably because they were too lame to call a real gift). Simple concept, the action figures were in cases of 12, the cards in cases of 24, make sure there's one of each per kid, and round up to the nearest whole case because there's no harm in giving a few extras of those. I explained 3 times, and he's still looking at me like he just doesn't get it. So, new strategy...grab a pallet, look at an order, and tell him...get 10 of those boxes, 5 of those boxes, then hand him the order and let him fill the rest.