My phone rang in the middle of the night recently. The caller was a remarkable young adult, a member of my newly blessed and blended family. He was distraught and needed to talk.
So we did. For an hour. It was an emotional conversation that brought us both to tears at various points. In the end, it brought him some comfort, it brought me more deeply into the fold of his side of the family and it brought us closer together.
When we hung up, my first reaction was to whisper a prayer, "Thank you for giving me the opportunity to help him."
When someone reaches out to us for help — for whatever reason — they're handing us a blessing. They're giving us a chance to commune more closely with God and the universal forces of good in nature than at any other time, and they're giving us the building blocks we need to fortify our own humanity. No matter what faith you practice or which name you call the Creator, it all comes down to the fact that loving/helping/giving is at the core of who and why we are.
As fundraisers, you are more keenly aware of this than most people. Or at least you should be. If not, you might just be going through the motions for the sake of a paycheck — like an omnivore who waxes poetic about tofu for high-end tips at an upscale vegan boite but sneaks off to McDonald's on his lunch break.
It can't last long. If you aren't aware of the blessing that is giving but you've chosen a career that hinges on you asking people to give, there could be a couple of issues at play. Maybe, deep down, you equate asking for donations with begging. If that's the case, you feel bothersome — maybe even embarrassed — just for doing your job.






