Treasuring Grace Ministries tries to make a difference in people's lives through spreading the word about the truth of life, and supporting those who need help. Everyone can do something to make the world a little bit better, and we want to help you find a way to make a difference too.
Time Magazine featured an article listing many ways busy people can take a few moments out of their day, group together with friends, or focus in on the needs of thier own community, to make a difference in the world. We'd like to share their ideas with you here.
Put Your Time to Work
• For anyone with a jammed schedule, a new group called the
Extraordinaries offers ways to devote even just a few minutes of free
time to something worthwhile. Micro-volunteering opportunities abound on
BeExtra.org, from
using your smartphone to view and label photos (to help digitize museum
archives) to snapping a picture of a local park (to help build a map of
places where kids can play).
• Another new tool aims to break world-changing action into its tiniest subparts.
IfWeRantheWorld.com,
which expects to launch this fall, encourages you to dream big — end
poverty! cure cancer! — and then helps come up with small, specific ways
you can help achieve progress in those areas.
• Random acts of kindness are getting a high-tech boost, thanks to social entrepreneur Daniel Lubetzky. First, print a card at
Kinded.com.
Then do something nice for a stranger, like sharing an umbrella or
helping carry luggage, and hand that person the card. The recipient can
go online and note where the act of kindness took place and then pass
the card along. It's like
Pay It Forward, with mapping features.
• The Web has long been a good venue for finding volunteer opportunities. Now a new site called
AllforGood.org
draws together listings not only from traditional volunteer sites but
also from Craigslist and Meetup. And it makes it easy to share these
opportunities with friends on social-networking sites.
Put Your Money to Work
• Buy a fair-trade scarf or the work of an African artisan on eBay's
WorldofGood.com, which vets every product to ensure that it's eco-friendly or ethically sourced.
• To help build a business in a developing country, try peer-to-peer lending.
Kiva.org
started the trend, which lets you lend as little as $25 to the
entrepreneur of your choosing and track the recipient's progress online.
Now there are specialized sites like
Wokai.org, which provides microloans in rural China.
Wokai is Mandarin for "I start."
• More than 1 in 9 dollars in the U.S. stock market is now invested in socially responsible funds. Go to
SocialInvest.org to find out how to shift your dollars to match your values.
Put Your Friends to Work
• Gather your pals and organize a reverse boycott called a Carrotmob.
Instead of punishing corner stores and other local businesses for
environmentally unfriendly practices, help them do better by arranging a
massive shop-in, in which the owners agree to use a portion of the
revenues to get greener.
Read more at:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1921577,00.html
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