[Community-service] Helping Others is Good for Your Health
Darian Smith
dsmithnfb at gmail.com
Wed Dec 14 19:27:05 UTC 2011
This is an amazing Article!
I've always thought that helping others is a good way to help one's
self as it has the power to help you find yourself. I think that this
kind of proves it.
If we give, not out of pitty, but out of love and a true desire to
improve the world around us, I think it can most certainly give us a
great sense of satisfaction and "warm-and-fuzzyy".
one thing that is mentioned that strikes a cord with me as well as
the idea of not just doing something to do it, but doing something
because you enjoy it. If you can take part in something and truly
feel like you are being appreciated, This goes a long way to
making you feel good about yourself and the cause you are selflessly
giving of yourself and of your time to.
Thank you for sharing!
Darian
On 12/13/11, Community Service Content <cscontentnfb at gmail.com> wrote:
> Greetings all,
>
> Below is an interesting article I came across this morning. Just one
> more great reason to do what we do!
>
> Helping Others Is Good For Your Health: An Interview with Stephen G. Post,
> PhD
>
> posted by
> Beyond Blue |
> 6:02am Tuesday October 18, 2011
>
> Helping Others Is Good For Your Health: An Interview with Stephen G. Post,
> PhD
> Mahatma Gandhi once said that “The best way to find yourself is to
> lose yourself in the service of others.” I have benefited from that
> advice, for sure,
> especially in the months that I was crawling out of a very severe
> depression.
>
> An expert on the perks that come with helping others is bestselling
> author Stephen G. Post, author of
> The Hidden Gifts of Helping: How the Power of Giving, Compassion, and
> Hope Can Get us Through Hard Times
> (Jossey-Bass, 2011). He is Professor of Preventive Medicine, Heard of
> the Division of Medicine in Society, and Director of the Center for
> Medical Humanities,
> Compassionate Care and Bioethics at Stony Brook University. Visit him
> on his website at
> www.stephengpost.com/hiddengifts.
>
> I have the privilege of conducting an exclusive interview with him.
>
> 1. What are some of the proven health benefits of giving oneself to others?
>
> Dr. Post: In light of our experience, I was struck by the 2010 Do Good
> Live Well Survey (www.VolunteerMatch.org) of 4,500 American adults. 41
> percent of
> Americans volunteered an average of 100 hours a year. 68 percent of
> those who volunteered reported that it made them feel physically
> healthier; 89% that
> it “has improved my sense of well-bring” and 73% that it “lowered my
> stress levels.” Not bad! It worked for us.
>
> The therapeutic benefits of helping others have long been recognized
> by everyday people. This concept was first formalized in a highly
> cited and often reprinted
> article by Frank Riessman that appeared in 1965 in Social Work.
> Riessman defined the “helper therapy” principle on the basis of his
> observations of various
> self-help groups, where helping others is deemed absolutely essential
> to helping oneself. These are grassroots groups that nowadays involve
> tens of millions
> of Americans.
>
> As the saying goes, “if you help someone up the hill, you get closer
> yourself.” Whether the group is focused on weight loss, smoking
> cessation, substance
> abuse, alcoholism, mental illness and recovery, or countless other
> needs, a defining feature of the group is that people are deeply
> engaged in helping
> one another, and are in part motivated by an explicit interest in
> their own healing.
>
> 2. Why does something as simple as just thinking about helping offer
> physical benefits?
>
> Dr. Post: In one famous study that has been replicated, study subjects
> are given a list of charities to which they might contribute. They are
> wearing an
> fMRI device that shows where the brain is active. When they decide to
> contribute to a particular item on the list and check a box next to
> it, the mesolimbic
> pathway lights up. This is area of the brain associated with joy and
> the release of feel good chemicals like dopamine.
>
> This reward mechanism is deeply evolved, and is probably related to
> the fact that helping behavior is so important for the survival of
> groups. As Darwin
> pointed out, sympathy is evolutionarily advantageous because it is the
> basis of the altruism and prosocial helping that allows any tribe or
> group to flourish
> and survive. A lot of writing these days is on “group selection,”
> which explains human nature in ways that “individual selection” (the
> purely gladiatorial
> image of conflict between individuals) does not.
> Learn more about the Hidden Gifts of Helping
>
> 3. What are some ways that people can make helping others a daily practice?
>
> Lots of things can help. Of course meditation, which deflects
> attention away from self . Adherence to moral principle, such as “Do
> unto others as you would
> have them do unto you,” can be important. Being part of a community of
> volunteers is useful, as is being around good role models and the
> right friends.
>
> But more practically, we should focus our efforts on some needful
> group that we feel called toward. For me this is the deeply forgetful
> (people with dementia),
> and I have been involved in providing caregiver respire for many
> years. Also, we should help in a way that uses our talents and skills
> optimally. This
> allows people to feel effective.
>
> As I give talks around the country to volunteer groups, however, I
> invariably encounter those numerous exceptions to the rule of a
> helper’s high. These
> are people who feel that their experiences as volunteers have been
> frustrating, and who do not last long in their efforts. I recently
> spoke with a group
> of “volunteer coordinators,” who often have full-time jobs working for
> hospitals, schools, hospices, and so many other organizations. The
> questions they
> ask are important:
>
> block quote
> * Are we caring for our volunteers?
> * Are we acknowledging them thankfully and rewarding them?
> * Are we preparing them well enough for their tasks?
> * Are we giving each volunteer the right task?
> * Are they flourishing and developing?
> * Are we providing the right overall vision?
> * Are we overwhelming any of them?
> * Do they feel joyful in their activity?
> * Are they doing this from passion?
> * Are they being affirmed and told how valuable their actions are?
>
> block quote end
>
> When these kinds of questions are ignored, and volunteers are not
> nurtured, many will come to see volunteerism as drudgery. This is the
> case especially
> when volunteers have been given poorly conceived tasks, have not
> received proper training, or are just filling up a slot without any
> thought given to their
> natural gifts and strengths. We need to ask who this volunteer is, and
> what special talents and gifts he or she brings to a wider effort. We
> need to ask
> volunteers if what they did felt meaningful, if they felt joyful and
> energized in their activities, and it they felt that it was a good fit
> for them.
>
> Originally published on
> Psych Central.
>
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--
Darian Smith
"To dream what is possible and to put oneself in service of that dream is the
formula
for a life well lived."
- Dr. Peter Benson
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