Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zero.
Same here. I gave up years ago because so many places at which I would consider volunteering (no kids, no animals, no incarcerated/formerly incarcerated), wanted a commitment of 3 or 6 months. I haven't looked for places to volunteer since.
Anonymous wrote:Zero.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I never thought of donating blood as volunteering - duh!! I've been a regular donor for 16 years.
I don’t consider it volunteering. I find it odd that it would be included.
DP. I do double red donations once about every three months (minimum of 112 days between donations), and each time I do it I spend nearly three hours in the blood donation center. How is that any less volunteering my time than if I were assembling sandwiches for a soup kitchen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I never thought of donating blood as volunteering - duh!! I've been a regular donor for 16 years.
I don’t consider it volunteering. I find it odd that it would be included.
DP. I do double red donations once about every three months (minimum of 112 days between donations), and each time I do it I spend nearly three hours in the blood donation center. How is that any less volunteering my time than if I were assembling sandwiches for a soup kitchen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I never thought of donating blood as volunteering - duh!! I've been a regular donor for 16 years.
I don’t consider it volunteering. I find it odd that it would be included.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Two different boards for country club: 10 hours/month
Your other volunteer service is awesome and seriously a commitment, and I guess this is volunteer work, but I wouldn't consider it charitable. OP doesn't state charitable volunteer work, but just saying.
Okay. People benefit, they just aren’t low income people.
What kinds of things do the country club boards organize?
Anonymous wrote:Because of how much of my time is taken up with child-related stuff (two young elementary kids), the past few years most of my volunteer hours have centered around the kids' schools/activities. You could argue that it's not necessarily charitable because most of the kids involved aren't coming from financial difficulty, but I think that's arguably short-sighted. If I run a couple of PTA fundraisers and part of what the PTA does with that money is provide school supplies and field trip funds for kids whose families can't afford those things and free family events they can attend, it does benefit lower income families in the community. Same with volunteering to coach a sports team -- free parent coaching keeps the cost of rec programs way down and makes them more accessible to lower income families. I do direct more of my financial contributions to organizations that don't benefit from my time and do benefit those with greater need, though, and once my kids are a bit older, there are a couple of organizations I would like to start working with more.