Most 16-year-olds have not traveled to over 20 countries and听all seven continents, skied in Antarctica, climbed Kilimanjaro, summited peaks in Peru and Nepal, been to Mount Everest Base Camp, received a grant from the American Alpine Club, founded a nonprofit, or spearheaded six humanitarian expeditions to remote corners of the globe. Most 16-year-olds are not .
Since Lilliana听was in kindergarten, she鈥檇听been telling her father, Mike Libecki鈥攁n accomplished mountaineer, expeditionist, and National Geographic Explorer鈥攖hat she wanted to ski with penguins. Once Lilliana turned nine, Mike decided it was time they start training. Together, near their home in Utah, the father-daughter duo practiced backcountry skiing and avalanche and crevasse training. When she was 11, they went on a . 鈥淚t鈥檚 a big deal,鈥 says听her father. 鈥淪ixty-mile-an-hour winds, crevasses, roped up, harness, real deal鈥攏ot just dad-daughter, but she has to be a partner out there.鈥澨
Mike has been on 87 expeditions and counting to more than 100 countries, bagging first ascents of mountains in exotic locations, often solo. Those experiences as an explorer and mountaineer shape his model for parenting. 鈥淓verything that goes into the equation of an expedition鈥攖he planning, the preparation, the persistence, the discipline鈥攖hat relates to every part of life,鈥 says听Mike. Most of all, he听wanted his life to serve as an example for his daughter to pursue her passions.

And she found her passion on an expedition to Tanzania in 2015, when she was 12. After summiting Kilimanjaro, Lilliana, her dad, and the rest of the team worked on a give-back project for rural communities in Boma Ng鈥檕mbe, Tanzania. They helped build two schools, two churches, and an orphanage and provided shoes and socks, solar power, and computers. The experience was moving for Lilliana, and she wanted to do more.听听
When they returned stateside, Mike created a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, with Lilliana as the president, Mike as vice president, and Lilliana鈥檚 grandmother, aunt, and uncles as board members. was born.听鈥淛oyineering is the act of bringing joy to our Mother Earth in all possible ways,鈥 says听Lilliana.听
Since its founding, the fund has raised more than听$500,000 for听its projects. The organization raises money through donations, grant applications, and sponsorships from companies like Clif Bar, Dell Computers, GoalZero, and more.听
The Libecki family, along with a crew from sponsoring companies, ventures to underserved, remote communities to provide basic necessities that much of the world takes for granted鈥攕hoes, socks, clean water, electricity, and education.听鈥淚 know I may not be able to make the biggest difference in the world and change the world,鈥 says听Lilliana, 鈥渂ut I might be able to change their 飞辞谤濒诲.鈥
A key component of the Joyineering Fund is sustainability, giving people the tools and knowledge to continue the work. In the summer of 2018, a group from the organization听traveled to Jhamtse Gatsal, a remote community in Arunachal听Pradesh, India. It听installed solar panels and lighting in the school buildings and provided computers and an internet connection for 90 orphaned children who live there. It was perhaps the fund鈥檚 most impactful expedition to date. Fourteen of the students there have since gone on to university鈥攖he first ever from the community to do so. For those kids, internet听access and computer literacy were听the difference that helped them earn their way to higher education.

The Joyineering Fund has carried out one major humanitarian project per year: in Solukhumbu, Nepal, in 2016; Huaraz, Peru, in 2017; and Jhamtse Gatsal听in 2018. Its current project is on the Philippine听island of Palawan. Two new schools are currently being built there by locals, facilitated and funded by the Joyineers. The Libeckis are traveling to Palawan this summer to install solar panels and computer labs. As the organization听grows in resources and experience, Lilliana hopes to fund two undertakings each year, already eyeing projects in Ecuador, Guatemala, Lebanon, and Greenland.听
The Libeckis听always incorporate a secondary adventure component to their work. On the Nepal expedition, after the humanitarian work, they听summited 18,500-foot Kala Patar. In Peru, they scaled 18,100-foot Mount Ishinca. In India, they trekked through peaks on the edge of the Himalayas. And in the Philippines, they听have their听sights set on Mount Cleopatra.
Looking ahead, Lilliana wants 鈥渢o continue to do trips听and Joyineering and going to remote locations in the world听and help out as much as I can.鈥 Her hope is that these efforts will also make it completely ordinary for people to ask themselves, 鈥淗ow can I do more?鈥