American Legion Auxiliary, Neosho MO - Unit 163

American Legion Auxiliary, Neosho MO - Unit 163 Welcome to the Neosho Unit 163 American Legion Auxiliary page. In the spirit of God and Country we serve veterans, military and their families.

The mission of the ALA is to support The American Legion and to honor the sacrifice of those who serve by enhancing the lives of our veterans and their families Mission
In fulfillment of our Mission, the American Legion Auxiliary adheres to the following purposes:

* To support and advocate for veterans, active military and their families
* To support the initiatives and programs of The American L

egion
* To foster patriotism and responsible citizenship
* To award scholarships and promote quality education and literacy
* To provide educational and leadership opportunities that uphold the ideals of freedom and democracy and encourage good citizenship and patriotism in government
* To increase our capacity to deliver our Mission by providing meaningful volunteer opportunities within our communities
* To empower our membership to achieve personal fulfillment through "service not self"

01/30/2026

Don't forget to support Faithful Friends Animal Advocates, Inc - this event is an important fundraiser! Expenses to operate the Adoption Center continue to rise and we rely on monetary donations from our community partners. If you are unable to attend the Souper Supper, I encourage you to click here https://www.ffaaneosho.org/donate.html, and set up sustaining, monthly donations.
Thank you and we hope to see you Saturday at the SouperSupper!

01/23/2026

We lost a fine man this week. Our much loved Dick Keezer " gave up the ghost" this week. Dick your spirit will always be with us. Thank you for sharing yourself so abundantly with us.

01/17/2026
11/28/2025

Thanksgiving is a day for gratitude, and it feels especially meaningful when we remember the heroes who can’t be home to celebrate. As Snoopy and his friends raise the flag, we’re reminded that every comfort we enjoy today — family, freedom, peace — is protected by the courage and sacrifice of our Veterans. 🇺🇸
May this season fill their hearts with strength and hope, and may we never take for granted the ones who stand far from home so the rest of us can gather safely with the ones we love.✨

11/24/2025

The Cookie Fundraiser is back this year! Stop by the Thrift store by Faithful Friends December 6th, from noon-4pm- bring your own container or we'll provide one. We'll have a large variety of cookies to pick from, and it's only $8/pound! Get stocked up! We'll also be pre-selling tickets to the Souper Supper coming up 1/24/26. All proceeds benefit the Adoption Center. See you downtown!

11/03/2025

Update on meeting place it is still first Sunday of month at 2pm at Flagship Auto across from Griffin Motors in Neosho

10/07/2025

10/26 | Display a Yellow Ribbon

10/06/2025

Fall Festival went really well

09/01/2025

"My name’s Dave. I’m 65. Divorced for ten years now. Not a widow, that’s important. Just.... divorced. My daughter, Sarah, lives across the country. We talk maybe twice a year. Holidays are quiet. Mostly, I sit in my small apartment, listening to the radiator clank and the silence where my family used to be.

Last winter was rough. Really rough. The cold got into my bones, and the loneliness felt heavier than ever. One freezing Tuesday, I didn’t have anywhere else to be, so I drove to the VA hospital. Not because I needed anything. Just.... it was warm. And quiet inside the waiting area. Less lonely than my apartment, weirdly. I’d sit in the corner, read the paper, sip bad coffee from the machine. Just.... exist.

That’s when I saw him. An old guy, maybe my age, sitting stiffly in a chair near the window. His hands were shaking. Not a little tremor, big, violent shakes. He kept looking at the door like he expected trouble. His eyes were wide, scared. Like a cornered animal. I knew that look. Saw it in the mirror after ’Nam, before the pills helped. Before the divorce.

I didn’t want to get involved. Honestly, I just wanted to be left alone with my own quiet ache. But seeing him.... it pulled at something. I fumbled in my coat pocket. All I had was a half-pack of that cheap cherry gum I chew on to keep my teeth from chattering in the cold. Stupid, I know.

I walked over. My own hands felt shaky. "Rough day?" I mumbled, holding out the gum. Didn’t know what else to say. Felt ridiculous.

He stared at me like I’d grown a second head. Then, slowly, he took a piece. Didn’t say thanks. Just popped it in his mouth. Chewed slowly. The shaking in his hands..... lessened. Just a bit. He didn’t look at me, but the panic in his eyes softened, like a storm cloud thinning.

I sat back down. Figured that was it.

Next Tuesday, he was there. Again. Shaking. Again, I offered gum. Again, he took it. This time, he nodded. Just a tiny dip of his chin. "Name’s Hank," he rasped.

Week after week, it became.... something. Not much. Just gum. And silence. Sometimes he’d say, "Cold out," or "Traffic bad." I’d grunt back. But the shaking stopped while he chewed. Every time. It was the weirdest little ritual.

Then, one day, a woman sat down beside Hank. Younger, maybe 50, but with the same hollowed-out look in her eyes, the look of someone carrying a weight no one else can see. She was twisting a tissue into shreds. Hank... Hank looked at me. Nodded towards her. Just once.

My heart hammered. Don’t do it, Dave. But I pulled out the gum. Offered it to her. She looked confused, then embarrassed. "Oh, no, I couldn’t"

"Try it," Hank said, his voice rough but firm. "Works."

She took a piece. Chewed. The frantic twisting of the tissue stopped. She didn’t smile, but her shoulders dropped, like she’d been holding them up for years.

It wasn’t planned. It wasn’t anything. But the next week, Hank was there with another guy, a quiet man with a cane. Hank had brought his own gum. And the woman was back. She brought extra packs.

We didn’t call it anything fancy at first. Just.... Tuesday afternoons. The Gum Corner. Someone brought folding chairs. Someone else found an old coffee maker that actually worked. We didn’t talk about the war, or the losses, or the quiet apartments. We talked about the weather. The bad coffee. The stubborn pigeon on the windowsill. But we were there. For each other. The gum became the excuse. The real thing was just.... not being alone in the quiet.

Sarah called me last month. First time in over a year. She sounded different. Less stiff. "Dad," she said, "I saw that picture you posted. The one with your.... friends.... at the hospital?" She paused. "You look.... lighter."

I didn’t have a grand story to tell her. No fridge feeding hundreds, no repaired toasters. Just a pack of cherry gum and a bunch of broken people learning to sit together without shaking. "Yeah," I said, my voice thick. "Turns out, sometimes the smallest thing..... just being there....it’s enough."

We don’t fix the world in the Gum Club. We just make the waiting room a little warmer, one piece of cheap gum at a time. And maybe, just maybe, that’s how the world actually gets fixed. One quiet "hello" when you’re scared. One piece of gum offered without expecting anything back. It’s not magic. It’s just...... human. And right now, that’s the most powerful thing I know."

Let this story reach more hearts....
Please follow us: Astonishing
By Grace Jenkins

Address

110 N. Neosho Boulevard
Neosho, MO
64850

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