Volunteer Profile: Kirk
For 49 years, Kirk Whiteley drove for a living. Now he drives to make sure fellow Seniors are living well.
When he retired, he volunteered to drive for Hyde Shuttle to bring local Seniors everywhere from stores to doctors’ offices to tax advisors. COVID interrupted the Sound Generation program, but Kirk did not let that interfere with devoting his time to supporting local seniors. Kirk had been and continues to volunteer four days a week, delivering hot lunches to seniors with programs including Meals on Wheels.
Last year, he also got behind the wheel for the Northwest Neighbors Network after he met NNN’s Sandy Moy at the Shoreline Lake Forest Park Senior Center Holiday Bazaar. Instead of driving a shuttle, Kirk uses his Toyota Rav 4 to resume his mission of making life easier for local seniors.
Kirk regularly drives one of his favorite members, Kim, who visits her husband three times per week in a nearby facility supporting his needs . “When she gets in the car, she’s talking about her husband and it is important to her.” Kirk appreciates that as a volunteer “you kind of become part of people's lives...They just want to talk to you; they’re not looking for answers.”
“I guess I just want to let them have their say,” Kirk continued, “Oftentimes people are cooped up in their homes and that’s the reason for NNN.” And many like Kim, face barriers of their own, on top of the barriers to see their loved ones.
Though the destinations may be difficult, Kirk and his passengers find ways to create joy on the commute. Kirk reminisced about his travels with one NNN Community Member who had three weekly six-hour dialysis sessions. He often took the night shift and they began to laugh about how business was booming at two side-by-side marijuana shops - and, fittingly, at the Dairy Queen up the road. “It got to be a joke between us. We (would get) to see what the marijuana place was doing and how the Dairy Queen was doing” on her way home.
A few months ago, Sandy sent an email to the circle of NNN volunteers who brought the member to dialysis, that the member had died. “That’s the hard part,” Kirk said, but “it’s just part of the territory of life.”
This is not new ground for Kirk. His wife of 30 plus years, “survived lung cancer for 11 years before passing away, I was often her caretaker. I’ve always been a caring person who wants to help people.”
It can be difficult to be directly involved in helping people, but the rewards are worth it. Kirk reflected on the difference between donating and volunteering. ”When you write a check you don’t know where (the money) ends up…doing this I know it ends up in my hands; I can see the results.” People are so grateful. When you take them to the store, they want to get you a gift and it’s really hard to tell them volunteers can’t take anything. Kirk said, “They’re expressing the fact that before NNN they didn’t know how they were going to get things done.¨
At 74 years young, Kirk feels fortunate to be more physically fit than many of his peers and be able to help them. He credits his career driving a semi for Dawn foods, hauling 50-pound pastry mixes for bakeries and 2000-pound stainless steel totes of the fruit processed for the bottom of yogurt cups. Now when he’s not driving for NNN, he “tinkers” with his ‘85 Corvette.
But, Kirk recognizes he eventually may not be as active as he is now. Though two of his three daughters are local, he hopes NNN will be around when he needs it, “Then I won’t be a volunteer, I'll be a member.”
-By Kimberly Cecchini, NNN Volunteer Contributor