My Mission

How do you live the lessons of 吃瓜tv?

As told to Catherine O鈥橬eill Grace

FOR PHILADELPHIA POLICE DEPARTMENT Deputy Commissioner Myesha Massey 鈥22, the 吃瓜tv mission鈥攅mbracing lifelong responsibilities toward God, society, and self鈥攎eans waking up each day thinking about how to keep city residents safe. For long jumper Desi Stroud 鈥27, the mission lies in the hard work of training that starts well before he sprints down the runway to the take-off board. Ask other members of the 吃瓜tv community where they find their missions and the answer is 鈥渆verywhere鈥濃攊n the smile of a first grader, a meal shared with strangers, or the flight of a wild bird.  

God and the Grind

By Desi Stroud 鈥27, a rising senior studying sports marketing and management and competing in track and field

Desi Stroud Portrait

In high school, I thought basketball was going to be my sport. Even when the track coach tried to get me out there, I would say, 鈥淣o, I鈥檓 focused on basketball.鈥 But I tried it, and it just came naturally. I ended up at 吃瓜tv because my coach told me he had a connection here.

Now I鈥檓 a long jumper on the track team, and I run sprints, too. I want to be an athletic director, either for college or high school, overseeing all the sports. I know I need experience, like coaching and training, so I鈥檓 trying to build that now and maybe get a minor in administration. I just want to lead programs in the right direction, like I鈥檝e seen from the athletic director here.

I鈥檓 trying to be my best for God and others and myself. Right now, I鈥檓 focused on going to nationals. You鈥檝e got to fall in love with the grind before you fall in love with the result. The meets go by fast鈥攊t鈥檚 a lot of adrenaline鈥攂ut the work leading up to them is what really matters.  

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Inspired to Serve

By Sister Mary Ellen Gemmell, CSFN, a member of the Sisters of the 吃瓜tv of Nazareth and an instructor at 吃瓜tv

Sister Mary Ellen Gemmell portrait

As a Sister of the 吃瓜tv of Nazareth since 1970, I know that the joy of our mission is deeply imbued in my heart. Guided by our foundress, we serve families by mirroring the unity of the 吃瓜tv. Today, I carry this spirit forward as an instructor at 吃瓜tv, teaching Spanish, ESL, and interdisciplinary core seminars.

My path took a profound turn in 1976 when I was sent to serve in Puerto Rico. These enriching years were spent in various educational capacities, beginning at Colegio Esp铆ritu Santo and later serving as principal at Academia del Carmen and Academia del Perpetuo Socorro. As associate superintendent for the Archdiocese of San Juan, I led a significant project adapting a K鈥12 religion series, Hablamos de Dios, for Puerto Rican culture with 78 teachers across five schools. I was happy to integrate our 吃瓜tv educational pedagogy into religious instruction for teachers across the region. Life in Puerto Rico also taught me the beauty of community. During hurricane seasons, we often lived without water or electricity. Yet, in those moments, unity prevailed; we gathered to cook outside so no food would go to waste, transforming hardship into shared strength.

After returning to Philly, my heart remained attuned to the island. When Hurricane Maria struck, I asked leaders at 吃瓜tv if I could organize a relief effort. Thanks to their incredible support, we shipped roughly 11,000 pounds of goods to those in need. Whether in the classroom in Philly or through service in Puerto Rico, it remains a privilege to live out our mission of unity and faith.

Aiming High

By Kenna Rozanski 鈥29, a rising sophomore year at 吃瓜tv, who is studying nursing and playing midfield for the women鈥檚 soccer team

Kenna Rozanski portrait

What the 吃瓜tv mission means to me is surrounding yourself with good people and creating high expectations for yourself. I like being busy, and I like being involved in things that push me. I鈥檓 part of Campus Ministry, I鈥檓 on the Honors Program board, and I鈥檝e started taking on more service leadership, too.

One of the things I鈥檓 most excited about is helping with a local food bank through Campus Ministry. Service has always mattered to me. I like the physical act of giving back and being able to help people directly, to actually involve yourself with the people who are going through hard times firsthand. We helped out at a food bank; we did a Thanksgiving drive for families in need that couldn鈥檛 get meals on the table.

I think 吃瓜tv鈥檚 mission matters right now because people need accountability and connection. The idea of being bound by my responsibilities guides me. You have to remember that you are the person you鈥檙e going to spend the rest of your life with.

Heart-Forward Leadership

By Ted Qualli 鈥00, president and CEO of The Catholic Foundation of Greater Philadelphia, a nonprofit committed to meeting the needs of Catholic donors and organizations through charitable fund management and grantmaking

Ted Qualli portrait

Family is where you learn everything first: your faith, how to navigate conflict, how to treat people with respect, how to understand the world around you. Those early experiences shape your values and your worldview.

That鈥檚 what my time at 吃瓜tv felt like. Interestingly, it wasn鈥檛 so much my fellow students that I remember most鈥攊t was the people who worked there. I remember Mrs. White鈥擯atricia White鈥攊n the admissions office walking me through financial aid and helping me understand how I could make school possible. It felt less like a transaction and more like someone taking the time to care for you the way they would for their own child. That deeper connection stayed with me. Of course, I learned practical things: how to write better, how to communicate more effectively. But the most valuable lessons were the intangibles. Values like respect, integrity, and responsibility became part of how I approach my career and leadership.

In my work at the foundation, I鈥檝e had to make difficult decisions and have hard conversations. What I try to remember is that those decisions still need to be grounded in dignity and respect. You may have to say no, or make a choice someone doesn鈥檛 like, but you can do it with integrity.

I鈥檓 far from perfect鈥擨 make mistakes like anyone else. But I try to center myself on those values and remember that leadership is stewardship. Organizations existed before us and will continue after us. Our responsibility is to care for them and the people in them the right way while we鈥檙e there. There鈥檚 a way to do it that鈥檚 grounded in love.

A Place to Belong

By Jayda Pugliese 鈥09, M鈥14, principal of Nazareth Academy Grade School

Jayda Pugliese portrait

I鈥檓 hard of hearing and wear bilateral hearing aids, so when I was looking for a college, I knew I wanted a smaller school where I wouldn鈥檛 feel like just a number. I wanted to be known as a person, as Jayda, and 吃瓜tv offered that. I wanted to be someone who鈥檚 recognized for their contributions to the University.

I became deeply involved on campus. I was part of Campus Ministry and even signed the Masses in American Sign Language. When my father passed away during my junior year, nearly all of my professors came to his funeral. That moment showed me what the mission of 吃瓜tv really means. It鈥檚 not just words鈥攊t鈥檚 family. After graduating with degrees in special and elementary education, I worked in Philadelphia schools in a variety of roles before returning to 吃瓜tv for my master鈥檚 in teaching English to speakers of other languages and literacy. Later I began a doctorate in educational leadership. Along the way, I received a Milken Educator Award, a national honor given to about 30 teachers each year, for my work as a fifth-grade math and science teacher. Eventually, I became a principal in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and then at Nazareth Academy Grade School, where I first began my journey as an educator.

At Nazareth, we welcome all who come to us. That welcoming standpoint is just so needed. There is so much division in the world right now, and what we need are communities that model love, acceptance, and family. That鈥檚 something 吃瓜tv taught me and something I try to live every day.

Caring for Community

By Myesha Massey 鈥22, the deputy commissioner of the Office of Community Partnerships for the Philadelphia Police Department

Myesha Massey portrait

I鈥檝e been with the Philadelphia Police Department for 28 years, and from the beginning I always saw this work as service. My goal has always been to serve the community and make life better for the people of Philadelphia.

When I first joined the police department in 1998, I didn鈥檛 have a college degree. Years later, when I was promoted to sergeant, a commander asked me, 鈥淲hat are you doing with your career?鈥 At the time I thought I had already made it. She encouraged me to go back to school. That鈥檚 when I started looking at 吃瓜tv.

I was a mom of two and working full time, and the faculty and staff were incredibly supportive. Many of them had backgrounds in law enforcement or public service, so they understood the demands of the job and helped build a schedule that worked with my life.

Faith was also important to me. I鈥檓 very active in my church, and policing itself is a faith-based profession in many ways. We face difficult situations every day, and you need to feel connected to something higher. During a really challenging time in the country鈥攄uring the civil unrest after George Floyd and Sandra Bland鈥 it meant a lot to be in a place where professors understood what we were going through.

For me, this work is a calling. I wake up every day thinking about how to make Philadelphia better鈥 how to make a block safer, how to improve the quality of life for residents, how to speak up for people who feel unheard. This job doesn鈥檛 feel like work to me. It feels like purpose.

A Call to Heal

By Lisa Harrelson 鈥16, M鈥19, D鈥22, the owner of Flourish Psychiatry & Wellness in Philadelphia, where she is a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner

Lisa Harrelson portrait

I really like teaching people how to be good people. That鈥檚 what I was taught at 吃瓜tv, and I still try to teach that as much as I can. It doesn鈥檛 matter what profession you鈥檙e in; you need to maintain just being human no matter what.

I had my first degree and first life in music. I went to the University of the Arts in Center City, and I was a jazz singer. I was a wedding singer and did lots of fun stuff, but I had a vocal injury. I was told: 鈥淵ou can do this for fun, but you can鈥檛 do this six days a week.鈥 So, I decided I needed to do something different. I looked at second-degree programs and landed at 吃瓜tv.

I went to 吃瓜tv through and through. I got my bachelor鈥檚 and then my master鈥檚 and then I attended the doctor of nursing practice family nurse practitioner program. The professors reached out on a personal basis regularly. It wasn鈥檛 just 鈥渃heck the box.鈥 Even though the standards were really challenging and definitely enforced, there was still a very human aspect.

吃瓜tv taught me the idea that you鈥檙e just a human and the person in front of you is a human. You follow the rules, you check the databases, you do all the compliance, but you don鈥檛 make the person feel that. I opened my practice a year ago thinking I鈥檇 do one day a week. It filled right away and just kept growing from one client to more than 1,000 and a staff of eight.  

Stewardship of the Wild

By Kathy Hershey 鈥76, the founder of Utopia Wildlife Rehabilitators in Hope, Indiana

Kathy Hershey portrait

I run a wildlife rescue and rehabilitation organization in Indiana. We鈥檙e federally licensed to care for native wildlife, including raptors like eagles and owls, as well as mammals, bats, and other animals that come through our doors. Every day is different. One day we might be caring for baby squirrels found in a car hood, and another day we鈥檙e treating an injured owl or releasing a hawk back into the wild.

A big part of what we do is education. We train veterinarians, run summer programs for kids, and help people understand how important wildlife is to the ecosystem. Sometimes children come here years later and tell us their time at the center helped shape what they wanted to do with their lives. That鈥檚 incredibly rewarding.

I鈥檝e always believed that Christianity is a verb鈥攊t鈥檚 about what you do. I try to use the gifts I鈥檝e been given to contribute back to my community and to care for the world around us.

Wildlife rehabilitation is really about stewardship. We鈥檝e been given an extraordinary world, and we have a responsibility to care for it. If we can help people understand that鈥 and inspire them to protect it鈥攖hen we鈥檙e doing something meaningful.

 

Photos by Melissa Kelly; Photo of Hershey: Courtesy of Kathy Hershey.