By Deaflegacy
Jadyn Firehawk discovered Second Life in 2009. She found it because she had a Flickr site for her real-life photography.  Noticing quite a few groups there that had names with Second Life in the
 name, it made her curious. Jadyn googled about Second Life, and that's 
how she found it.
Jadyn created an account, 
and at that time there were "community gateways" for entering Second 
Life from the main website. She saw Virtual Ability as one of the 
gateways. At the time, she had been very 
active in a bipolar disorder support group chatroom online. It 
interested her that there was a disabilities support group on Second 
Life.  She Joined the Virtual Ability group, and began exploring Second 
Life from there.
Jadyn has bipolar disorder and
 post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).  She has chosen to be open with 
people about that as a part of her personal activism for mental illness,
 hoping that it will help it become less stigmatized by society. When
 asked about some of her accomplishments in Second Life, Jadyn spoke of 
her background. Jadyn is a former university professor, but had to go on
 disability due to the bipolar disorder and PTSD beginning in 2001.  It 
improved a little in 2005 and she was able to go back to work part 
time.  When Jadyn came into Second Life in 2009, she was still working 
part time.
 Jadyn had a friend from the bipolar
 disorder chatroom, who decided to try out Second Life, too. He was 
young, in his early 20s.  He was in school and on disability, and had 
very low income as a result.  Her friend didn't have a single dime to 
spare to spend in Second Life and Jadyn understood exactly what that was
 like from her own experience having been on disability, so she gave him
 some Lindens every week so he could have a bit of fun. She
 enjoyed helping him and it gave Jadyn the idea of starting something up
 in Second Life where others could maybe do it too.  That's when Jadyn 
created the Pixel To Pixel Foundation and it's been going in Second Life
 ever since. 
The P2P Foundation receives 
donations from very kind and generous people throughout Second Life.  
Then it turns around and distributes weekly stipends to people who are 
on disability so that they can do such things like rent a home, buy some
 clothes or furniture, upload textures, or get some building supplies.
The
 P2P Foundation has just celebrated its 7th Year Anniversary in the 
Summer of 2016. Jadyn said, "The P2P Foundation's Director avatar 
account, named Pixel Falconer, has a rez date of June 29, 2009. That's 
what we consider to be the founding date. That avatar is the one that 
receives the donations, holds the funds, and disburses the stipends."
The
 P2P Foundation currently supports 22 people who are on disability with 
weekly stipends of L$500, so the total amount that it fundraises and 
disburses is L$11,000 a week. "It's a 
challenge for a small organization to keep up that kind of fundraising!"
 said Jadyn. "We'd like to help a lot more people, so we're always 
looking for new donors. There are over 20 people currently on the 
waiting list."
In order to sign up for P2P 
Foundation, there are two things - recipients must be "on" disability, 
and not just "have" a disability and they must be willing to provide a 
copy a document showing that is the case. "With health-privacy 
information protected, of course," she added, "This
 is so that they have been pre-screened already by an agency for having 
medical proof of disability." said Jadyn.  She went on to explain that 
some donors express concern about possible abuses of our system.
Jadyn
 added that although she had to disability-retire from her career in 
2010, she has been able to make an income in Second Life from teaching 
tips at Builders Brewery and from her shop, Maganda Arts, and draws no 
funds from the foundation. The Building Tricks 
series that she teaches at Builders Brewery now includes 15 different 
classes. At Maganda Arts, she sells a wide range of things including 
historical homes, furniture, kinetic sculpture, and real-life 
photography.
When asked about other accomplishments besides the P2P Foundation, Jadyn spoke about the Yosemite sim. She explained that the other reason she wanted to tell me about her former 
career as a university professor is, when she became disabled in 2001, 
she had been working on a book about Yosemite National Park.  Jadyn's 
research specialty was national parks and protected areas. When
 she was unable to work, in a sense, she also "lost Yosemite". "And it 
was a great loss to me. Yosemite is my favorite place in the whole wide 
world. I've been there so many times, I've lost count."
She
 has just recently created a virtual Yosemite National Park in Second 
Life, and it opened in July 2016.  According to Jadyn, its peak 
visitation so far, according to Linden Lab's traffic measurements, has 
been 8434. ("Traffic" is defined by LL as "the cumulative minutes spent 
on the parcel by all visitors to the parcel within the previous day") For
 a few weeks, the main park, Yosemite Valley (Forever Wild) was in the 
Editor's Picks in the Second Life website's Destination Guide. It is now
 in the Nature & Parks section, along with her Shinzen Japanese 
Garden, also located at the Yosemite sim.
"I see it as, I lost Yosemite in 2001 when when I became disabled.  But now, 15 years later, I have it back again!" said Jadyn.
Jadyn
 also mentioned the Ethnographia Project, which expresses her story of 
experience with disability and Second Life. "It's not quite complete yet
 though, a work in progress," said Jadyn.  She added that it is open to 
the public. However, to the writing part, Jadyn is still working on it. 
Jadyn
 went on to describe Yosemite Valley (Forever Wild). "Yosemite Valley 
(Forever Wild) is one full sim in size and there's horseback riding 
available here for free." said Jadyn.  "And it's a nice place to relax 
and enjoy the scenery, and meditate or visit with friend."
The landmarks are:
For the Ethnographia Project: http://maps.secondlife.com/
For the P2P Foundation Office: http://maps.secondlife.com/
For the Yosemite Valley (Forever Wild) : http://maps.secondlife.com/
For Maganda Arts: http://maps.secondlife.com/
For Shinzen Japanese Garden: http://maps.secondlife.com/
Jadyn
 also mentioned the Building Tricks class series at Builders Brewery.  I
 have been to some of these classes and they were fantastic.
The class tutorials landmark is: http://maps.secondlife.com/
The Builders Brewery is: http://maps.secondlife.com/
Deaflegacy 
Gemma Cleansalte wrote on Virtual Yosemite in July 2016. 









