Sometimes all it takes is just one person reaching out – not just for the relationship struggles, but practical issues like, How do I face the world? How do I take care of the kids? Cathy would share where she’d been successful, and by 1993, the Tijerinas started a program called Keeping Faith to help keep families and inmates together. In 2000 they put structure around it and developed the curriculum of what now is their suite of TYRO programs ministering to youth, adults and families. Cathy had become a paralegal and her skills translated well into grant writing. In 2002 The RIDGE Project was awarded its first grant and held its first family support event in 2007.
The couple faced another challenge in 2001. Ron was released after serving 11 years. The couple had prayed that God would send them where no one else would go, and six months later, with Cathy three months pregnant, his case was overturned. Ron was sent back (eventually spending another four years in prison.) This is where God really tested their faith and resolve. Cathy said God kept her going with the phrase, “I parted the Red Sea,” which she interpreted to mean God would give her the courage to continue the work. Eventually, the Ohio Governor released Ron and weeks later The RIDGE Project was awarded the grant that changed its trajectory.
They named The RIDGE Project programs TYRO, after the Greek word for apprentice, novice, someone learning something new, a warrior – all applicable descriptions of one learning how to war to become a leader at home, war for their family, and war for their legacy, Cathy said.
“You’ve got to put in the time, the sweat, the tears, the discipline,” Ron said. “The TYRO programs disrupt the idea of a perfect family. People believe because they are struggling, it is too late, that they can never have the healthy family they want. They have to have the hope that they can still have it.”
TYRO programs offer 24 hours of instruction, usually delivered in two-hour blocks weekly that take participants from cycles of self-destruction to cycles of self-improvement. In the past nine years, TYRO has influenced 23,070 men and serviced 29 state and federal grants. In the past 13 years, 16,284 have graduated from TYRO Dads/Leadership programs, 4688 have enrolled in JET and Financial Management, with a completion rate of 98%, and 7254 completed TYRO’s CORE Communication program, according to The RIDGE Project’s most recent annual report.