| December
2001
Volunteering
to Help Others Can Help Ease Grief
Many grief counselors advise that
one of the best ways to work through grief, especially during the
holidays, is to keep busy -- to get involved with life again especially
by volunteering your time to help others.
I know a woman who was grieving deeply after the loss of her husband.
Having always loved horses, she decided to volunteer at a local
therapeutic horsemanship program. This program provided people with
mental or physical disabilities the opportunity to enhance the quality
of their lives through learning to ride and take care of horses.
She worked as a "walker" steadying the riders who had
difficulty in riding, and helped to groom and feed the horses. Being
around these gentle animals and seeing how the program helped people
with disabilities gave her a new hope and vision for a better future.
To find out if there is such a program in your area, visit the Web
site www.narha.org, or call 800-369-RIDE (7433).
There are many other organizations that will welcome volunteers
no matter how much time you can commit whether it is an hour a week,
or a few days a month.
A recent article in the December AARP Bulletin listed some interesting
volunteer activities which offer a wide variety of activities:
America's Second Harvest is the nation's largest domestic hunger
relief organization. It feeds hungry people by soliciting and distributing
food and other grocery products through food banks and rescue programs.
It is worthwhile for another reason -- it helps to eliminate the
waste of food. There are currently ten centers in New York State.
To find out if one of them is near you, visit their website at:
www.secondharvest.org.
Big Brothers Big Sisters of America is the country's oldest and
largest youth mentoring organization which serves more than 200,000
children and youth annually nationwide. To contact them, look in
your local phone directory, call 866-276-2447 or go to www.bbbsa.org to find a local center.
Habitat for Humanity is dedicated to eliminating poverty housing.
To find an affiliate near you, check your local telephone book or
go to www.habitat.org. In addition to site work in this country,
they offer one to three week tours overseas in their Global Village
program.
Meals on Wheels Association of America depends on volunteers to
deliver nutritious meals and to maintain social contact with older
persons who are homebound. To locate the nearest program, go to
www.mowaa.org and click on "Search for a Program".
National Mentoring Partnership is a resource for people interested
in becoming mentors to young people. For information on mentoring
and local programs go to www.mentoring.org or call 888-432-6368.
Points of Light Foundation mobilizes volunteers to work in communities
through a network of 500 volunteer centers nationwide. Call 800-865-8683
or go to www.pointsoflight.org.
In addition, some newspapers publish "volunteer matchmaker"
columns which give information on local opportunities such as county
offices for the aging, theater groups, animal shelters, etc., which
can use help.
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