Finding volunteering opportunities on
or around Thanksgiving, on or around Christmas, or any time
between these holidays, is much harder than most people imagine.
Why is it so hard?
- So many, many people want to volunteer during the holidays
that organizations that involve volunteers during these days
book their volunteer openings quickly, often months in advance
(some food pantries and soup kitchens are booked with
volunteers for Thanksgiving and Christmas a YEAR in advance!).
- Most economically or socially-disadvantaged people find
family to be with during the holidays. Even most people
staying in homeless shelters go to a family member's home on
Thanksgiving or Christmas Eve or Christmas Day. That means
that many shelters and soup kitchens don't serve many people
on Thanksgiving or Christmas.
- It is very hard for a nonprofit organization to develop a
one-time, just-show-up and volunteer activity that is worth
all the expense (staff time to supervise the volunteers and
supervise them, particularly since the volunteer may never
volunteer again); often, it's cheaper and easier to simply let
the staff do the work themselves. In addition, group
volunteering activities are also quite difficult to develop,
for similar reasons.
- Staff at nonprofits often suspend all training of new
volunteers the week of Christmas, through January 1. This is
to allow staff some time off to be with their own families for
the holidays.
If you are absolutely determined to find ways to volunteer during
the holidays:
- Start looking early. August is not too early. January is
not too early!
- Volunteer with the organization months before the
holidays: go through their orientation process, get trained,
and prove yourself as a reliable volunteer at least a few
times. You are more likely to get to volunteer during the
holidays as a result.
- Contact your local office of Meals on Wheels. They will
prefer that you volunteer several times before the holidays,
to prove yourself as a reliable volunteer, before signing you
up for any days during the holidays.
- Call, email or visit the nearest ReStore - the thrift store
that operates for the benefit of Habitat for Humanity in your
area. You could help organize books or albums or DVDs (if they
sell such) - they often need this help every week. You could
help organize any area of the store: games and puzzles,
luggage, electronics, holiday-related items for sale, etc. You
could help move furniture from the warehouse to the showroom.
You could take photos for online sales. You could help people
take large items to their car. Every ReStore is different in
how it involves volunteers. Some require volunteers to
volunteer for a minimum hours a week. Some allow volunteers to
help just one day, one time.
- Holiday farmer's markets or city markets. Many towns and
cities ended their outdoor weekly farmer's markets this month,
but will have a special in-door event in December. Same for
nightly markets, artist markets, etc. Just find the nonprofit
or government agency that does your town's weekly or monthly
farmer's market, artist market, outdoor market, etc. and see
if they have an event in December, and contact them about
volunteering.
- Helping at any community event. Does your town have a
holiday parade? Is there a music performance happening at your
city auditorium or another venue? Contact the organizers and
ask if you can help with ushering, directing parking,
whatever.
- Call your local United Way and ask for a list of homeless
shelters and other agencies that serve food in your community,
then call each shelter to ask if you can volunteer during the
holidays (call at least three months in advance; six months or
a year is even better). Be ready to call numerous places in
order to find a place to volunteer on a holiday, and have an
alternative if, even calling six months in advance, you cannot
find a place on your preferred day.
- Call the Salvation Army to see if they will be delivering
meals or serving meals during the holidays and if you could
volunteer to help with either activity. Call at least four
months in advance.
- Contact local hospice organizations to see if you could
help with meal delivery or other services during the holidays,
or on a specific day.
- Call your local USO, VFW, VA hospital and other veterans
organizations and ask them if they will be doing any
activities during the holidays that you could volunteer for.
- Call your local hospital and ask to speak with the
volunteering coordinator. Ask her if it would be okay for you
to make get well cards for all the children in the pediatric
unit that will be there during the holidays, or on
Thanksgiving or Christmas in particular, how many cards you
would need to make to ensure each child got such a card, and
how you would deliver those to the hospital so that they get
to the kids on the day you want them delivered. Then spend a
day (you can include friends and family!) making those cards.
- Call your local jail or nearest prison and ask if it would
be okay to make Happy Holiday cards for the people
incarcerated. Ask how many you should make and when you should
drop them off to be distributed on a holiday. When making your
cards, be senstive to the variety of cultures and beliefs that
may be among the residents.
- Make a list of all of the various senior homes in your
immediate area. Call each and find out how many people are
living in each, and if it would be okay for you to make and
drop off Season's Greetings cards you make. Then spend
a day, afternoon or morning making cards for one of these
facilities. When making your cards, be senstive to the variety
of cultures and beliefs that may be among the residents.
- Make baked goods and, on the holiday of your choice, drop
by places that might have someone working -- animal shelter
staff, police, firefighters -- and distribute them with your
best wishes.
- Practice singing 5 - 10 short songs with families or
friends, then call your local hospital or senior home and see
if you could perform there during lunch or supper for patients
or residents during the holidays.
- Get a group together to serenade volunteers serving food at
the local homeless shelter, or people coming in to pick up
deliveries for Meals on Wheels, or volunteers at a Habitat for
Humanity site. Get permission from the associated nonprofit
well in advance -- do NOT just show up. And take no for an
answer -- if you are going to be in the way, or your going to
delay work too much, your offer may be turned down. You can,
ofcourse, also look for opportunities to sing for recipients
of service (people in hospice care, people receiving meals at
home, etc.) but, again, get permission from the associated
nonprofit well in advance -- do NOT just show up.
- Clean up or decorate a room in a facility serving youth,
seniors, patients, etc. (you will have to start looking at
least six months in advance for such an experience).
- Arrange to do a canned food drive to benefit your nearest
food pantry at your workplace, community of faith, ethical
society, civic group, sports facility, or central site in your
neighborhood.
- Arrange to have a book drive for the local library at your
workplace, community of faith, ethical society, civic group,
sports facility, or central site in your neighborhood
(however, call the library first, to make sure they accept
book donations, and make sure donors understand that their
books will probably be sold and the money used to benefit the
library, rather than their books becoming a part of the
collection).
Note that for certain activities, nonprofits may require that
the names and home addresses of all volunteers be supplied to
them. They may require volunteers to undergo criminal background
checks. Don't be offended; respect the policies and procedures
of nonprofit organizations regarding volunteer involvement, some
of which may be required by law, just as you expect employees to
adhere to policies and procedures at your workplace.
Also see the various web sites where you can find places to
volunteer in your community in the USA:
If you are thinking of holiday volunteering as a way to deal
with your own loneliness, depression, feelings of worthlessness,
etc., a caution; most nonprofits are not prepared to address the
mental health needs of volunteers. Here is realistic advice for
Volunteering to Address Your Own
Mental Health (loneliness, depression, anxiety, etc.) that
will help you find appropriate volunteering that won't frustrate
you or make your condition worst.
You may also want to review these
resources regarding labor laws and volunteering.
If you feel mistreated as a volunteer, here is advice
for volunteers on how to complain.
Also see
Advice for family volunteering -
volunteering by families with children and, related,
advice for teaching children
compassion & understanding instead of pity with regard
to poverty.
Home-Based (in your own home)
Volunteering Where Your Service is NOT via a Computer or the
Internet (at least not to actually DO the volunteering
service, but you may need to report your work online).
You are NOT too young to volunteer! Ways
you can volunteer, no matter how young you are
Volunteering with
Seniors.
Advice for volunteering as a group /
volunteering in a group
Finding Community Service
and Volunteering for Teens
How to Find Volunteering
Opportunities, a resource for adults who want to
volunteer
Online Volunteering (Virtual
Volunteering)
Creating or Holding a Successful
Community Event or Fund Raising Event.
Fund Raising For a Cause or
Organization
How you can advocate for an issue
important to you
Volunteering To Help After
Major Disasters
Volunteering with organizations that
help animals and wildlife.
Volunteering to Address Your Own
Mental Health. There are many people that have high
hopes that volunteering for a "good cause" can help them
address their own mental health issues - depression,
loneliness, even feelings of suicide. And, absolutely, social
interactions and accomplishments that can come from
volunteering can help improve a person's mental health. But
volunteering activities can also can augment negative
feelings. This resource is designed to help you have realistic
expectations for volunteering and to avoid an experience that
will make you feel worse instead of better.
Tax credits for volunteering
(for residents of the USA)
How to Make a Difference
Internationally/Globally/in Another Country Without
Going Abroad
Using Your Business Skills for
Good - Volunteering Your Business Management Skills, to
help people starting or running small businesses / micro
enterprises, to help people building businesses in
high-poverty areas, and to help people entering or re-entering
the work force.
Details on how to quickly fill a community
service obligation from a court or school.
Ideas for Leadership
Volunteering Activities
These are more than just do-it-yourself volunteering - these
are ideas to create or lead a sustainable, lasting benefit to
a community, recruiting others to help and to have a
leadership role as a volunteer. These can also be activities
for the Girl Scouts Gold Award, the Duke of Edinburgh's Award
(U.K.), a mitzvah project, or even scholarship consideration.
Ideas for Creating Your Own
Volunteering Activity.
How
to complain about your volunteering experience.
Donating Things Instead of Cash
or Time (In-Kind Contributions)
Group Volunteering for Atheist and
Secular Volunteers
Helping People Address Their
Problems with Plastic
How to mobilize a community to clean up plastic bottles,
plastic bags and other plastic waste from their environment,
and how to reduce their use of such items in the future
Ideas for Funding Your
Volunteering Abroad Trip.
Careers Working With Animals
(for the benefit of animals)
© 2010-2022 by Jayne
Cravens, all rights reserved. No part of this material can
be reproduced in print or in electronic form without express
written permission by Jayne Cravens.
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Suggested books:
Volunteering:
The Ultimate Teen Guide (It Happened to Me)
The
Busy Family's Guide to Volunteering: Doing Good Together
Doing
Good Together: 101 Easy, Meaningful Service Projects for
Families, Schools, and Communities
Engage
Every Parent!: Encouraging Families to Sign On, Show Up, and
Make a Difference
Volunteer
Vacations: Short-Term Adventures That Will Benefit You and
Others
Children
as Volunteers: Preparing for Community Service
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