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A PATH APPEARS – change lives for the better

on February 28, 2016

Like many,A path appears I contribute to some non-profit organizations, and have been a World Vision child sponsor for many years.  More recently, I realize the responsibility to go from easy act of giving to more thoughtful consideration to give where it creates impact I care about.

If you are interested in changing lives for the better including your own, you would love this book “A path appears” by Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn.

In this world of unequal opportunities contributed no less by the lottery of birth, the book offers, the best I have seen, a path on how to help those who lose at the birth draw.

With Cure-Violence to combat inner-city conflicts in the United States by applying principle of epidemiology; or organization which brings in older Americans to tutor students in public school across the country, it gives a catalog of opportunities to support babies to teens, from combating inner-city challenges to transforming slums in Kenya.  The true stories are riveting and convincing how small acts of individual can make life-changing impacts to others.

I love the refreshingly bold section that talks about challenges in managing non-profit organizations and at times competition among them.  Recently, I read about peA path appears 2ople stop donating to a non-profit organization as they consider the CEO got a high pay (when it was pretty low compared to the business world). There is expectation that people associated with non-profit initiatives should be sacrificial.  Such undermines abilities to attract best talent and create pressure to cut corners in the administration of non-profit organizations.  Should we judge instead the impacts the organization make or not make?

The third and last section sums up to “help others help ourselves”.  It echoes a childhood learning that helping is the origin of happiness.  If altruism has a mixed record of success, it has an almost perfect record of helping ourselves.

If you just want to spare a minute on the topic, the last page lists six steps to take in the next six minutes.

Another on my reading list: “Half the Sky” from the same authors.


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