GivingTuesday 2025: A Day to Give To Others After a Weekend of Getting
For over a decade, I have dedicated the Tuesday after Thanksgiving to GivingTuesday. GivingTuesday reimagines a world built upon shared humanity and generosity. This weekend was about shopping and getting yourself the best deals. Today is a time to give to others: your money, your time, your talents, your platform, and whatever you can do in your ability to benefit others.

GivingTuesday 2025 and Wardrobe Oxygen
Each GivingTuesday, I donate a percentage of the profits from Wardrobe Oxygen to a deserving charity or organization. Sometimes, it is a lump sum, and sometimes, it is a monthly donation, but it adds up to 10% of what Wardrobe Oxygen earns in a year.
What is GivingTuesday?
GivingTuesday was created by Henry Timms and the 92nd Street Y. Cofounded by the United Nations Foundation, GivingTuesday started in 2012 as a way for people to do good within their capacity.
Growing up, Black Friday was a single day. Now in 2025, with the internet and the ease of online shopping, it has become Cyber Week with deals starting days before Thanksgiving and going into this week. But what if we all took one day of buying and spent a day giving back? GivingTuesday was created to do just that.
Once I heard about GivingTuesday I was all in. I decided to dedicate the first Tuesday after the Black Friday weekend to it, not to show off what money I sent where and what volunteering I did but to be a moment in your feed of buy buy buy to read about some special organizations and think about ways you too can give to and support others.
Organizations Wardrobe Oxygen Supports in 2025 and for GivingTuesday
While I usually choose the orginization/s at the start of the year, I am known to switch directions or add on charities based on what is going on in the world and our country. Wardrobe Oxygen donated to several organizations throughout this year:

CMMP: A Consistent Money Moving Project
In 2020, I first learned about Mutual Aid and how it can benefit those who may be overlooked by bigger charities. By giving money directly to those in need without big budgets for staff and marketing, Mutual Aid can make a radical difference right in your neighborhood. Since then, I have been donating $5 a week to a Mutual Aid program; for the second year in a row, it is CMMP, AKA a Consistent Money Moving Project for the Washington, D.C. area.
CMMP came out of a realization that consistency and certainty in transferring small amounts regularly has a lot of value to many people dealing with poverty and that a project structured around such transfers could also make for a relatively light lift for those contributing to the pot for distribution.
Since the project’s inception, CMMP has grown from moving money to a few individuals to over twenty. Most recipients are Black, long-time Washingtonians. Many are parents of young children. Some are not securely housed, and at least two recipients have recently re-entered society after incarceration.
In its 19th season, CMMP receives weekly pledges from over 500 people totaling almost $7,000 weekly. This is pretty cool because last year it was only 200 people and a little over $3K. CMMP currently pays out money to 30 recipients in weekly amounts between $215 and $235 (depending on household size).
If you wish to learn more or get involved in organizing, the CMMP website and the CMMP Basics doc provide information on the program's core values, how it operates, and how to participate. You can also follow CMMP on Instagram.

Success in Style
As a style influencer and content creator, it is disgusting how much free clothing my peers and I receive on the daily, while many struggle to have clothing to wear with confidence to a job interview. We've all seen the mountains of discarded clothing in other countries, and read the articles about how a lot of donated clothing never reaches a recipient.
Success in Style (SIS) is a Maryland-based organization that offers fashion consults, professional attire, and interview skills to support in-crisis individuals pursuing employment. SIS takes monetary and apparel donations. Donated professional attire and accessories in great condition are added to the closet to job seekers. The other clothing is sold in one of three resale clothing boutiques in Historic Savage Mill. The profits from the sold clothing go back to the SIS employment support program.
Before my mom passed away and life went topsy-turvy, I donated my time to Success in Style. The staff of the Savage Mill boutiques are volunteers and often are looking for those who can work when many are at school or the job place. Each shift, I would bring clothing I received from brands and/or no longer fit in my closet or life. I continue to donate clothing on a quarterly basis along with a recurring monetary donation.
I really enjoyed the experience working at Charity's Closet and Charity's First Picks. When life made it nearly impossible for me to volunteer my time, I signed up to send a monthly financial donation. The experience really made me curb my clothing shopping and accepting of gifted apparel.
I believe a hardworking closet that brings you comfort and joy is a valuable investment, but walking through the warehouse of clothing at SIS is a harsh reminder that there is enough clothing on this planet, it's just not well-distributed to those who need it. And SIS is trying to do just that here in my home state.

Maryland Food Bank
For my daughter's Girl Scout Silver Award, she and two of her fellow scouts revitalized a little food pantry in a neighboring town and created collection points in our city to keep the pantry filled. Even with regular donations, I saw how quickly that pantry got depleted. We as a family began a separate monthly donation, and with the pause to SNAP benefits, upped those donations to weekly. But also this year, we began monthly donations to the Maryland Food Bank.
Since 1979, the Maryland Food Bank (the first food bank on the East Coast), has supplied food to hundreds of food pantries, soup kitchens, shelters, and faith-based organizations that serve food-insecure Marylanders. This work is supplemented with outreach programs that provide direct food assistance, educate the public on the importance of good nutrition, and fight hunger through innovative means.
While the Maryland Food Bank accepts donations of food and your time as a volunteer, you can make the biggest impact with monetary donations. A dollar donated to the Maryland Food Bank can stretch to provide over a dozen meals, as food banks can purchase food wholesale, receive bulk discounts, and benefit from tax-exempt status to make your dollar go further. A recurring monthly donation, no matter the size, is an amount a food bank can rely on, budget with, and make plans to help more.

I Support the Girls
In 2015, a neighbor shared on Facebook that she was collecting bras and menstrual products for a friend who would take them to DC shelters. I gathered up items from the back of my intimates drawer and linen closet and added them to the community donation to a woman named Dana Marlowe.
Little did I know that single Facebook request for donations was what started I Support the Girls. That year, I shared I Support the Girls for Giving Tuesday. Since then, I have been a supporter of I Support the Girls and consider its founder, Dana Marlowe a friend.
It has been thrilling to see how I Support the Girls has grown to be able to help people have access to bras, underwear, and menstrual hygiene products across the globe. I Support the Girls has created a national clearing house to encourage ISTG's affiliates to collect locally and distribute locally in their communities.
I Support the Girls appreciates financial donations, but also is successful thanks to those donating their time. Consider hosting a drive in your community. Have Dana speak at your workplace, event, or organization to increase visibility for those experiencing homelessness and how they lack such necessary items for hygiene and dignity.

Meals on Wheels
Our country does a poor job of caring for its elderly. With so many folks one paycheck away from homelessness, seniors are at the highest risk. Among Americans 60 and older, a quarter of them live alone, 29% have a disability, almost 15% of them are veterans, and 12 million of them are threatened by or experience hunger.
The Meals on Wheels network is comprised of 5,000 community-based programs across the country dedicated to addressing senior hunger and isolation by delivering balanced meals to their residence. Meals on Wheels serves over two million seniors annually and recipients say the program has improved their health, made them feel more secure, and helps them live independently.
I began supporting Meals on Wheels at the end of 2022 when I learned about my local program and the large number of seniors they support right in my zip code. My mom was in the neighborhood Golden Age Club and shared stories of members who struggle to shop for groceries, cook, and even remember to eat on a daily basis and how they benefit from Meals on Wheels.
Follow this link to the Meals on Wheels website where you can enter your zip code and find a local Meals on Wheels program. You can then contact to receive meals for you or another, and also find out how to donate directly.
Supporting Organizations on GivingTuesday
Maybe you haven’t heard of one or more of these organizations I shared and this post opened your eyes, heart, and wallet for one of them. Or maybe you support or run an organization that does good in a community you care about. Do share in the comments the name, the URL/website, and a brief description so we can learn more and give more!
Let’s be honest, you came to Wardrobe Oxygen for shopping advice. Maybe it was how to style something already in your closet but likely if I showed just the right sweater or lip balm, you would click and buy.
Consider taking what you would have spent on that item and donate it to one of these organizations or the organizations in the comments below. In my expert opinion, that is the chicest thing you can do today, it’s also the most beneficial treatment for your complexion!


You’re definitely helping get this nice new “holiday” cemented in my mind. Saw something in an email about Giving Tuesday and thought of you right away and came over. I will be supporting my local food/resource assistance, especially with this SNAP debacle, which i find to be egregious. Also would like to start monthly donations to a trusted media group, probably NPR but haven’t quite decided yet. Thanks for being a beacon Alison!! <3
Thank you for the giving Tuesday reminder. Yes, we come for the shopping and style advice, but stay because of you and your journey to be a really great human in this not so great world. Our local pet shelter, Planned Parenthood and the Red Cross are my favorites all year. Today the pet shelter has generous donors matching our contributions. Hang in there good people.
Thank you for mentioning and giving to these important causes!
I love that you shared this post again this year. It’s a great reminder of organizations both in our local communities and around our country that need our support. I donated again to the AR Food Bank in my state—they always have matching funds on Giving Tuesday to double all donations! And, I also donated to the ACLU (matching funds to double all donations today too). They are going to have so much work to do. Alison, thank you for choosing and highlighting organizations that are making the world a better place.
Sharing two more: CREATE Arts Center and Vote Mama Foundation.
Through arts education and therapy, CREATE Arts Center has transformed lives in the DMV for 40 years, inspiring creativity and fostering resilience through art: https://www.givelocaltogether.org/o/create-arts-center
Vote Mama Foundation is building the political power of moms. Through research and advocacy, we are making it easier for moms to run for and serve in elected office, and partnering them once in office to defend and advance truly family-friendly policies: https://www.every.org/votemama/f/help-build-the-political
World Central Kitchen https://wck.org/story started by chef Jose andres provides hot meals everywhere where there is a crisis and a need. Stories from Ukraine show that he and his organizations assist people when they need a warm meal.
Such great organizations. Speaking of heath care, I wanted to share an organization that tugged at my heartstrings and to which I donated. A friend of a friend has a young daughter, Lucy, who was diagnosed with a rare genetic disorder that will take away her ability to talk and walk. Development of gene therapy is underway, but because the number of children with the disorder is very small, no insurance company, pharma company, or venture capital firm is willing to fund it. Lucy’s family is dedicated to raising the $1.3 million to continue developing the cure for their daughter and other children like her. Here are links to the fundraiser and to the nonprofit’s website: https://givebutter.com/1point3before2023 and https://www.moonshotsforunicorns.org.
I’m happy to highlight MM LaFleur’s amazing Giving Tuesday offer — a buy one, donate one campaign of a range of their top items (including the Aditi dress, my favorite!). Buy one item, and MMLF will donate the same item to Bottomless Closet, plus offer you a 20% discount when you do so. Link:
https://mmlafleur.com/collections/bottomless-closet-mmlafleur-giving-tuesday-2022
Great post and I love how you talk about your support of organizations like this frequently. For my own Giving Tuesday, I’ll be donating to my own state’s AR Food Bank. They are always my charity of choice because of the good work they do in our rural state to help feed families.