Jake and I have spent one day each in the last two weekends leaving the house and doing some good.
I’ve listened to many people talk about how they feel helpless and how they want to do something, which is why they buy flags, light candles, visit fire stations, donate money, etc. Many have visited ground zero to do all they can. Some, more than all they can.
Two weeks ago, I logged into my company’s volunteering site, to lookup some information for my applications. The site listed ongoing volunteer projects as well as ones coming up in the next month. As I read one after the other, I decided that’s all I wanted to do. I wanted to spend all my time volunteering. Not down in ground zero, but in the millions of other places that needed it and have been needing it for quite some time. I don’t mean to put down anyone who’s helping down by ground zero. They have all my respect and then more. I am not sure that I’m emotionally prepared to face the scene so I appreciate others who do.
I think what I like about volunteering is how little effort it takes to make a visible difference. Selfishly, I love the sense of accomplishment I get from helping others. I know it sounds cheesy, but it’s the truth. Not to mention it’s loads of fun.
Last Sunday, Jake and I took a trip to Brooklyn to volunteer at BARC Shelter’s Dog Show and Festivities. We helped raise thousands of dollars for the shelter and had tons of fun watching the dogs with their tricks and costumes.
On Friday, we drove to Boston to spend our Saturday volunteering at City Year’s annual Serve-A-Thon. Since Jake’s an alumni of City Year, he’s gone back to Serve-A-Thon for the last ten years. I’ve joined him on the seven that he’s attended since we start dating. The Serve-A-Thon always inspires me. Seeing thousands of people up at the crack of dawn in the Boston cold, energized to make a difference would win over even the more cynical citizens, I hope. Over the years, we’ve painted, scraped, washed, weeded and always had tons of fun.
There are opportunities to serve every day, every minute and every second. If you don’t like animals, you can work with the elderly, the blind, children, or the sick. You can paint, read, mentor, teach, build, or simply keep someone company. I don’t do it because it sounds good, I do it cause I have fun, I meet new people, I learn and I receive just as much as I give. If not more.
Martin Luther King said, “Everyone can be great because everyone can serve.”
Don’t you want to be great?
Previously? Theory of Relativity.
Animals can’t talk… so we can only guess as to what they’re feeling or saying. I feel more compassion for them than I do for humans in that sense since we can at least bitch and moan about our problems — so my first donation after Sept 11th actually went to the ASPCA.