Volunteering makes you feel good and gets you out of the house more often, increasing your activity level and improving your self-esteem. Helping others can lower your risk of depression, high blood pressure and heart disease.
June 30, 2015
Volunteering makes you feel good and gets you out of the house more often, increasing your activity level and improving your self-esteem. Helping others can lower your risk of depression, high blood pressure and heart disease.
Combine the obvious health benefits of exercise and fresh air with subtler feel-good benefits that come from doing good deeds.
It's like a carpool — without the car — and with the added benefits of exercise and socializing with friends and neighbours.
Volunteer to coach for a community soccer, basketball or football team — or umpire a Little League baseball game.
Even if your children are grown, your community is full of kids who need volunteer grandparents, aunts and uncles to read at local schools or daycare centres. What better way to pass on your wisdom to the next generation?
Whether it's at your place of worship, library or humane society, volunteering is good for you and others, and can even help you manage your diabetes in indirect ways.
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