volunteering Archives - Wellbeing Magazine https://wellbeingmagazine.com/tag/volunteering/ The State of Feeling Healthy & Happy Mon, 26 Aug 2024 17:53:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://wellbeingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/cropped-cropped-Wellbeing-W-192x192-1-32x32.png volunteering Archives - Wellbeing Magazine https://wellbeingmagazine.com/tag/volunteering/ 32 32 Cheers For Volunteers! https://wellbeingmagazine.com/cheers-for-volunteers/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=cheers-for-volunteers Sat, 01 Jun 2024 15:48:03 +0000 https://wellbeingmagazine.com/?p=104052 “Ordinary people have changed the world time and time again. They don’t do it by sitting at home alone, they do it by joining up with other people.”  – Johann Hari The 40th anniversary of Volunteers’ Week in the UK runs between 3rd and 9th June, and represents the perfect opportunity to celebrate the amazing […]

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“Ordinary people have changed the world time and time again. They don’t do it by sitting at home alone, they do it by joining up with other people.”  – Johann Hari

The 40th anniversary of Volunteers’ Week in the UK runs between 3rd and 9th June, and represents the perfect opportunity to celebrate the amazing contributions volunteers make around the Deans and the Havens!

I am blown away by the community spirit I have found here. Day after day I meet people volunteering locally, regularly or ad hoc. In person or online, at school, in the office, in a place of worship, a sports club, carehome, on the beach, in a communal garden and at the other end of the phone, the list goes on!

In addition to volunteering through groups, clubs, and organisations, I’ve discovered that more than half the UK’s population is involved in informal volunteering within their communities. It is often not visible, and chances are you have been doing it yourself, in one way or another; feeding the neighbour’s cat, helping a student with professional experience in your business, weeding around the local tennis courts, picking up a prescription for a neighbour or watering a garden which is not yours.

I like to say that you can’t give a hug without receiving one too. … well volunteering has the same mutually beneficial effect. 

Research shows that volunteering has a powerful impact on our health, purpose and engagement. It:

  • Improves our mood, boosts motivation, and positive emotions and reduces stress
  • Ignites growth, learning new skills, stretching our comfort zone, and stimulating our brains
  • Increases physical activity, keeping us active
  • Offers social interactions and connections, which can generate long-lasting friendships. It is a natural networking opportunity too
  • Strengthens community ties, by having a direct impact on others’ lives, it can also create a sense of belonging 
  • Creates purpose in life, it is an excuse to use your unique skills, find meaning and clarify your sense of direction

A few years ago I joined “A Touch of Gentleness”, a local, not-for-profit community of people committed to bringing ‘connection, touch, and gentleness’ back to society. Many hand massages later I am now training volunteers myself, and I would like to give a big shout-out to the Plough Inn in Rottingdean, East Sussex, who are huge supporters of local community initiatives and are hosting our monthly training.

Do you have:

  • A desire to help and inspire others, use your skills and meet new people with a common interest?
  • A cause that matters to you?
  • Spare time?

Then perhaps volunteering is for you.

Here are some ideas and local initiatives to get you started:

  • Picking up litter on the beach in Saltdean, Ovingdean and Rottingdean with GRAB
  • Giving a hand at the Saltdean Tennis Club (much work is done behind the scenes)
  • Helping at the community supermarkets and the Havens food collection
  • Watering a tree on the Saltdean Oval or in the Peacehaven Orchard 
  • Mentoring a young woman or young carer with Flourish Mentors
  • Welcoming visitors to the Lido
  • Marshalling at the Park Run in Peacehaven
  • Offering free hand massages in carehomes, hospices and local events with A Touch of Gentleness

If you are short of time, you can donate to a volunteer organisation of your choice so they can keep training their volunteers and supporting the initiatives they work for.

Volunteering is time well spent and has the power to transform us, which ripples into the communities for the better. I can’t imagine a better time to become involved in a more mindful and deliberate way.

The next free 1-day training to be a volunteer with A Touch of Gentleness will take place in:

Hastings on 3rd June, and Rottingdean on 13th Juneclick for more information

Individually and collectively let’s dare to be the change we want to see in our organisation, family, community and life!

#volunteersweek  #thankyouday

Reference:

https://www.ncvo.org.uk/news-and-insights/news-index/uk-civil-society-almanac-2023/volunteering

Words: Mathilde Barbier

Pre-Peri-Menopause Wellbeing Practitioner and Coach

You’ve reached that life phase where your thermostat is more unpredictable than the weather, your brain as foggy as the South Downs on a winter morning and your mood swings higher than the pendulum ride on the Brighton Pier?

Mid-life doesn’t have to be wild and mad!

Gentleness can hide in our biggest challenges.

Get in touch to chat about the tumultuous, yet empowering, midlife transformation

Together we will explore ‘the change’ with gentleness, self-compassion and humour.

mathilde[@]daretobethechange.today – 07947 319 362

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Is the UK becoming more charitable as a nation? https://wellbeingmagazine.com/is-the-uk-becoming-more-charitable-as-a-nation/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=is-the-uk-becoming-more-charitable-as-a-nation Tue, 14 Jan 2020 08:45:19 +0000 https://wellbeingmagazine.com/?p=90226 Over the past year, we’ve noticed a significant rise in people searching for local volunteering opportunities — could we becoming more inclined to work for free? 

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Volunteering is nothing of a new concept, for years people have been giving up their spare time to help other people and causes in need. But, over the past year, we’ve noticed a significant rise in people searching for local volunteering opportunities — could we becoming more inclined to work for free?

A rising trend

According to NCVO’s January 2019 survey of over 10,000 respondents, almost four in 10 Britons currently volunteer, and seven in 10 say that they’ve volunteered at some point in their life.

When we compare ourselves to our European counterparts, it seems like we’re performing rather well. In Italy, only 9% of the total population say that they’ve volunteered and 51% of Dutch 15-24-year olds engage in societal activities as a volunteer at least once a year.

NfpSynergy’s 2017 report which gathered statistics on thousands of people from 2004, analysed volunteering figures. They discovered that the proportion of 16-24-year olds who volunteer has risen significantly over the past 13 years, up from 15% to 29%. A comparable percentage change was seen in 25-34-year olds over the same period.

It can depend on which societal bracket people are from too, with those from higher socio-economic groups (ABC1) more likely to have volunteered recently than those from lower groups (C2DE).

Google search data tells a similar story, that volunteering has increased. When looking at search volume in the UK around the term “volunteering near me” from December 2017 to December 2018, the following data was captured:

Country Difference in search volume*
England +83%
Scotland +85%
Wales +85%
Northern Ireland +366%
United Kingdom +124%

 

While England, Scotland and Wales have seen similar increases in search volume, Northern Ireland has experienced more than a three-fold increase in searches for the term. This could be down to the substantial push from male suicide campaigns to raise awareness and encourage fundraising, following the announcement that the country has the highest suicide rate in the UK. There is also a high level of competition for skilled positions in the country and volunteering is one way for people to differentiate themselves from the rest.

Why are we volunteering more?

Aside from charities making public pleas for more volunteers, what is encouraging us to give up our free time for a selfless cause?

Volunteering has now been acknowledged as part of the wider health policy, with the NHS five-year plan highlighting the need for community volunteering. This is down to the mental and physical health benefits that can be reaped from volunteering.

NCVO discovered that the majority of people stated volunteering benefits their mental health and can even act as an antidote to loneliness. 77% of those surveyed revealed that volunteering had improved their mental health and 53% claimed their physical health had benefitted from the activity.

90% of participants felt that they made a difference through volunteer work and 89% claimed it led to them meeting new people, both of which may also be reasons in higher volunteering figures.

While many people are deciding to volunteer themselves, there is also a push from schools, universities and employers. NfpSynergy’s findings also revealed that volunteering rates peaked at 33% among 16-24-year olds in 2013/14 but in 2017 this peak was also discovered in 24 to 34-year olds. This suggests that people who began volunteering at school and university are continuing to do so as they get older. It could be that people do need an extra push to start giving back but when they do, they realise the benefits.

10% of volunteers give their time via employer-supported volunteering. As company’s push to better their workforce and company, volunteering has been realised as a great way to improve mental health and get the brand involved in local causes. For example, men’s shirts retailer CT Shirts allows their employees one day volunteering per year to encourage them to get involved with the local community. Similarly, Accenture, a large consulting firm, provide their staff with three corporate volunteering days to help a charity.

With improved physical and mental health as two of the many benefits of volunteering, it appears volunteering locally is helping us partly deal with the UK mental health crisis and issues we have with loneliness. As more people sign up to giving up their free time, we will hopefully discover more benefits of volunteering in the future.

*Percentage difference is between number of searches for ‘volunteering near me’ in December 2017 and number of searches in December 2018.

https://data.ncvo.org.uk/a/almanac14/how-many-people-regularly-volunteer-in-the-uk-3/

https://blogs.ncvo.org.uk/2018/07/26/new-volunteering-data-out-today/

https://www.ncvo.org.uk/policy-and-research/volunteering-policy/research/time-well-spent

https://www.cbs.nl/en-gb/news/2018/40/half-of-dutch-youth-engage-in-volunteering

https://www.aynicooperazione.org/volunteering-in-italy-an-overview/

https://www.thirdsector.co.uk/young-people-volunteering-says-nfpsynergy-research/volunteering/article/1445878

https://www.theguardian.com/voluntary-sector-network/2018/jan/03/volunteer-transform-life-charities-councils

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/stories-45836491/suicide-in-northern-ireland-i-have-no-sons-left

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