Only Make Believe

Only Make Believe

Performing Arts

New York, New York 795 followers

Only Make Believe creates interactive theatre with children in hospitals, special education schools, and care facilities

About us

Only Make Believe is a non-profit organization that creates and performs interactive theatre for children in hospitals and care facilities. Only Make Believe is dedicated to the principle that freeing a child's imagination is a valuable part of the healing process.

Industry
Performing Arts
Company size
11-50 employees
Headquarters
New York, New York
Type
Nonprofit
Founded
1999
Specialties
Theater, Theatre, Interactive Theater, Children, Health, Joy, Imagination, Healing, Happiness, Kids, Hospitals, Healthcare, Performing Arts, and Broadway

Locations

  • Primary

    121 West 27th Street, Suite 1002

    New York, New York 10001, US

    Get directions
  • 716 Monroe Street, NE

    Studio # 7

    Washington, D.C. 20017, US

    Get directions

Employees at Only Make Believe

Updates

  • View organization page for Only Make Believe, graphic

    795 followers

    Last week, OMB staff members Chris Wilson and Bonnie Christilaw joined New Alternatives For Children (NAC) for the Open House and Ribbon Cutting ceremony at their new home. OMB has been performing with NAC since 2006. We’re honored to partner with this incredible organization. NAC provides innovative, high quality services in support of birth, foster, and adoptive families caring primarily for medically complex children. This alignment with the Only Make Believe mission has made for a dynamic partnership between our organizations, and we look forward to continuing this impactful relationship as NAC enters this exciting new chapter! #nackidscan #medicallycomplexkids #inclusionmatters #nonprofitnyc #nonprofitpartner

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  • Only Make Believe reposted this

    View profile for Dr. Stephanie Cawthon, graphic

    Building accessible learning and workplaces from the inside out. See website for details!

    Accessibility is easier to achieve when you can break it down to concrete components. Access to both quality information and to meaningful relationships is so key — including ourselves! This framework is powerful for teams as they work to improve accessible for all. Book launch is just around the corner! 🚀 Head to the book website to have direct-to-you updates :) #DisabilityIsHuman #Disability #Accessibility [ID: Green and purple graphic with light lilac accents. On the top is a title pill box that says Accessibility. On the left hand side is a definition: Accessibility is the opportunity to engage with people, ideas and self in an authentic and organic manner. On the right are three boxes with 1,2,3. They say: 1: Access is not the burden of disabled people. 2: Access is more than accommodations. 3: Access must be intentional. There’s a link to www.DisabilityIsHuman website on the bottom. ]

    • 
[ID: 

Green and purple graphic with light lilac accents. On the top is a title pill box that says Accessibility. On the left hand side is a definition: Accessibility is the opportunity to engage with people, ideas and self in an authentic and organic manner. On the right are three boxes with 1,2,3. They say: 

1: Access is not the burden of disabled people. 

2: Access is more than accommodations. 

3: Access must be intentional. 

There’s a link to www.DisabilityIsHuman website on the bottom. ]
  • View organization page for Only Make Believe, graphic

    795 followers

    We're excited to announce the addition of Owen Baughan to our Junior Board in DC. Owen stopped by a show recently at HSC Pediatric Center at National Children's Hospital, and he jumped right into the action. We think he'll be a great addition to the OMB community! Owen Baughan is a management consultant at PwC in their Workforce Transformation practice, focusing on human capital business initiatives. Prior to PwC, Owen worked at the DC fintech startup WalletHub, where he was a product manager tasked with helping grow their car insurance business. Owen graduated from the University of Virginia with a BA in Economics and was born and raised in Winston Salem, NC. Owen has lived in DC since 2020. He loves the outdoors, live music, travel, and anything on the water. #juniorboard #dcnonprofit #artsnonprofit #nonprofitboard #giveback

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  • Only Make Believe reposted this

    View profile for Dr. Stephanie Cawthon, graphic

    Building accessible learning and workplaces from the inside out. See website for details!

    "I'm running out of spoons!" 🥄🥄🥄 Spoon Theory has had a profound effect on my view of time and energy. Christine Miserandino helped to bring Spoon Theory to my world. This concept is based on her experiences with Lupus and multiple other chronic health conditions. In the original essay, she describes a conversation she had with her friend about the difference between being healthy and being sick. The spontaneous use of spoons on the dining table helped to make concrete the abstract ideas behind energy availability and expenditures that are part of living with disability or a chronic illness. This idea and more are woven throughout Disability Is Human to help us build awareness and empathy for disabled people in our homes, schools, and workplaces. Thank you Christine, and here's to spoons well spent. #Disability #DisabilityIsHuman #Accessibility #Books Image description: Dark purple square with white text that says: Do you know the importance of Spoon Theory for disabled people? In the bottom right hand corner is an image of the book cover for Disability Is Human: The Vital Power of Accessibility in Everyday Life by Stephanie W Cawthon. It is lime green with dark purple font and lilac accents.

    • Image description:

Dark purple square with white text that says:

Do you know the importance of Spoon Theory for disabled people?

In the bottom right hand corner is an image of the book cover for Disability Is Human: The Vital Power of Accessibility in Everyday Life by Stephanie W Cawthon. It is lime green with dark purple font and lilac accents.
  • View organization page for Only Make Believe, graphic

    795 followers

    We are so grateful to have spent this summer partnering with BroadFutures, Inc., an incredible nonprofit revolutionizing the way young neurodivergent people enter the workplace. In addition to being paired with our wonderful DC intern, Jamie Gesell, we were given the opportunity to share what we do at OMB with the young people participating in BroadFutures. Executive Director Tamela Aldridge and Program & Marketing Associate Megan Graves developed and taught a series of workshops recontextualizing the core principles of OMB for young folks experiencing a professional setting. Watching these participants grow in confidence and skill was nothing short of amazing. Thank you, BroadFutures! #summerintern #neurodivergent #neurodiversityatwork #inclusiveworkplace #workshop #neurospicy

  • Only Make Believe reposted this

    View organization page for Unlearning Ableism, graphic

    13,382 followers

    We shouldn't need to create a graphic on how to respond when you meet a Disabled person. But sadly, the reality is that most people feel fear, act differently, or say something ableist when we share with them. So following our Monday graphic, "Don't let your interaction be ableist. Please don’t", we created today's to follow on from this. Reach out today to learn how Unlearning Ableism's training and workshops can help your organisation. info@unlearningableism.com Image Description: An Unlearning Ableism graphic. The title reads, “Someone self-identified, what should I do?” Below are 12 statements and circles accompanied by text and a piece of stick person clipart, they read: 1. Thank them – a person with their hands clapped together. 2. Don’t assume – a person assuming. 3. Don’t correct their language – a person drawing a tick. 4. Be respectful – a person letting a person using a walking aid past. 5. Don’t ask what happened – a person looking uncomfortable as another asks a question. 6. Don’t say they can’t be – a person judging another walking past using a cane. 7. Ask preferred communication – two people using two cups on a piece of string as phones. 8. Be patient – a person with their hand on their hip. 9. Be flexible – a person doing the splits across two blocks. 10. Ask if they have access needs – a person asking another a question. 11. Treat them as a person – two people fist-pumping each other. 12. Be open – a person speaking to a wheelchair user. #WednesdayWisdom #DisabilityInclusion #DiversityAndInclusion #UnlearningAbleism 

    • Someone self-identified, what should I do? Thank them. Don’t assume. Don’t correct their language. Be respectful. Don’t ask what happened. Don’t say they can’t be. Ask preferred communication. Be patient. Be flexible. Ask if they have access needs. Treat them as a person. Be open.

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