5 Huge Benefits You Get for Volunteering
September 09, 2015Volunteering to help others has many side benefits. Read more to discover how serving other people takes you down the path to your own well-being.
Most people focus on the help you’re providing to other people, animals, the community, or the environment when you volunteer, but serving others often gives just as much, if not more, to the person volunteering. Sure, you might say, a person feels good when they help others, but can that really be called more? Just check out this list of benefits you get when you serve others.
Reduce Loneliness and Depression
There are a few ways volunteering can help you in this category, but one of the biggest, I believe, is that helping others helps you feel needed. Well, it’s more than feeling needed; you are needed! Those you serve are happy to see you, excited to talk to you, and glad to do what they can to make you happy as well. It’s hard to remain lonely when you know someone’s face is going to light up like the sun when you walk in the room. And, though depression is a lot more complicated, studies have found that volunteering reduces rates of depression, especially as you get older.
Increase Self-Esteem and Happiness
How can you feel worthless when someone thanks you from the bottom of their heart after you make a lawn of the jungle in front of their house, or help them get the grades they need to graduate? You built that house with Habitat for Humanity; you put those smiles on their faces. Volunteering gives you a sense of purpose and accomplishment, made all the more valuable because it was your choice to do it.
Make Great Friends and Connections
Increase Lifespan and Decrease Illness
Now, it’s not entirely certain whether this benefit is a result of causation or correlation, but in the end, does it really matter? People who volunteer might become more physically active and aware of their health needs, or people who are more physically active and aware of their health needs are more likely to volunteer. I figure it doesn’t matter which one came first. If you start volunteering, you’re likely to start being more active (especially if you’re providing a physically active service).
The hormones released when doing good also have a good effect on our health. Studies show volunteering lowers blood pressure and reduces the risk of heart disease. Volunteering also reduces stress (those feel-good hormones again, along with physical activity), which is a serious strain on health nowadays.
Increase Your Value at Work
Many people aren’t very happy or healthy when they stress over financial problems. Financial issues can wreck a lot of things in your life, not just your health. So consider this, how many companies would pay more for a person who has great people skills, fast and accurate problem solving skills, good focus, and an ability to communicate? Add in the ability to work in a team and experience project planning, among other things, and you have someone worth a lot more in a company’s eyes. Volunteering can give you these abilities and more. And since you can choose how or where you volunteer, you can easily pick something that gives you the most benefit and experience.
The Catch
The best results come with about two hours of volunteer service a week, so find something or someone that you care about and get to work! I promise you won’t regret it.