When I see someone on the side of the road I stop to ask if they’re okay. Usually folks are fine but sometimes they’re not. Once I wound up giving a guy a ride to a gas station at 3am mid winter.
I listen to anyone who has nobody to talk to, and never gossip about what I learn about people.
If someone doesn’t have something they need which I have and don’t need I give it to them.
I stopped smoking years ago but when I’m in the city I carry a pack just to be able to offer a few to homeless folks.
I send money to charities that I care about.
I pay my taxes.
I post in response to questions like this to try my best to remind folks that simply thinking about whether you’re helping society means you have the capacity to do so.
Yeah, we are all one variable out of the 8 billion that constitutes the algorithm of life, and granted no single person can stop a genocide or end poverty or cure Alzheimer’s. That shouldn’t be your benchmark for impacting society.
Do not try to measure yourself against Warren Buffet, Winston Churchill, or Pope Francis. Those aren’t normal people.
Judge yourself based upon what you have to give and whether you give what you have.
When I see someone on the side of the road I stop to ask if they’re okay. Usually folks are fine but sometimes they’re not. Once I wound up giving a guy a ride to a gas station at 3am mid winter.
I listen to anyone who has nobody to talk to, and never gossip about what I learn about people.
If someone doesn’t have something they need which I have and don’t need I give it to them.
I stopped smoking years ago but when I’m in the city I carry a pack just to be able to offer a few to homeless folks.
I send money to charities that I care about.
I pay my taxes.
I post in response to questions like this to try my best to remind folks that simply thinking about whether you’re helping society means you have the capacity to do so.
Yeah, we are all one variable out of the 8 billion that constitutes the algorithm of life, and granted no single person can stop a genocide or end poverty or cure Alzheimer’s. That shouldn’t be your benchmark for impacting society.
Do not try to measure yourself against Warren Buffet, Winston Churchill, or Pope Francis. Those aren’t normal people.
Judge yourself based upon what you have to give and whether you give what you have.
You matter.