Volunteering gives you an opportunity to change people’s
lives, including your own. It gives you the satisfaction of playing a role in
someone else’s life, helping people who are needy and helpless. Volunteering is
a way of giving back to your community while developing important social
skills, and gaining valuable work experience all at the same time. There are so
many beneficial ways of getting involved in and giving back to your community.
Why not spend a little time helping others, because in the end, what goes
around comes around.
Volunteering is not only effective, but it’s a good way
to meet people, learn and develop social skills. A volunteer get satisfaction
by knowing how their contribution has made a difference. This experience
contributes to personal development especially in areas such as
self-fulfillment, self-confidence, and self-esteem which often flourish in the
midst of volunteering experiences. Knowing that you made a positive impact on
someone is an emotionally uplifting experience that can never be matched by
money or fame.
It is often said that a person’s high school years are
some of the most important they will experience, and are often seen as a
critical and life-shaping time. During this period in their life people often
begin to discover what is meaningful to them and how they plan to continue
living their life. Although the teen years are sometimes seen as tumultuous and
full of difficulties, in reality, I think they can be meaningful and filled
with changes and important decisions. My volunteering experience at Nepal Red
Cross Society has helped me form this positive experience during my high school
years; through valuable lessons I have learned about life skills and have begun
to shape my values and mind-set. In the course of my volunteering at the Nepal
Red Cross Society, I have discovered how to interact with others, learned to
respect diversity, realized the importance of service, and gained perspective.
Volunteering has taught me how to interact with people and effectively
cooperate alongside others. In the beginning of the volunteering, I was very
nervous about meeting new people and being pushed outside of my comfort zone. I
was rather timid and not very extroverted. I then started learning to introduce
myself to new volunteers, go out of my way to make new volunteers feel welcome,
and overall how to extend a hand of friendship to others. Not only this skill has
been applicable to my personal life, but has also been extremely helpful in my
academic life and the “real world.”
I think one of the most significant values I have gained
through my experience at Nepal Red Cross Society is the importance of humanitarian
service. Service involves making a difference in the lives of others and
contributing to the community. I believe that through volunteering at the Nepal
Red Cross Society, I can embody this value. Each time I end my volunteer shift,
I feel better and as I am aware of doing something worthwhile. This feeling has
fueled me to continue volunteering, and has now become something I see as
irreplaceable. In the past, I got frustrated by my situation, and was
discouraged because I felt I might not make a significant difference due to my
young age. However, I am relieved of this because I feel that through the Nepal
Red Cross Society volunteer program I can try to do my part and help others. The
hope that I can indeed do something. Because of my involvement at Nepal Red
Cross Society, I have come to include service as a necessary part of my life.
This is why I volunteer – because I feel an obligation to do my best to help
others and contribute to society in any way I can. I feel that my love and
compassion for people are the strengths especially applicable to service, and
that volunteering my time is the best way I can satisfy this calling. I know
that my experience as a Nepal Red Cross Society volunteer has been a wonderful
opportunity to grow as a person, and I have made use of this to the best of my
ability. I genuinely think that without my volunteer experience, I may have
been a different person, lacking these skills and ideals. I have matured and
gained valuable skills, as well as learned important lessons about life. Many
people my age do not have an experience similar to this, where they are in an
environment based solely upon healing and helping others, and I think they have
truly missed out. I will continue on this path of service throughout my life,
and I know that because of my volunteer experience I have benefited, and that
these benefits will carry on as I develop furthermore.
Volunteering is not a choice, it’s a responsibility!
Volunteers don’t get paid, not because they’re worthless, but because they’re priceless.”






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