I want to share something with you today that made my heart smile. Not because it is new news to most of us who have lived a while, but because it is wonderful when science catches up with what our grandmothers told us all along.
A comprehensive review of decades of research on volunteering has just confirmed what we have always suspected in our bones. Giving our time, our attention, our presence to others does not just help them. It helps us. It helps us in ways that are measurable, significant, and frankly, rather remarkable.
Let me translate some of that research language into something we can sit with over coffee.
The study found that people who volunteer live longer. Not just a little longer. Significantly longer. They found reduced mortality, which is a fancy way of saying that the act of reaching out to others adds days and years to our own lives. Think about that. The very thing that asks something of us, that requires us to get up and go and do, is the very thing that keeps us here longer to keep doing it.
They also found that volunteers have better physical functioning. That means we can keep doing the things we love. We can keep gardening, keep walking, keep lifting grandchildren, keep moving through the world with strength and purpose. Volunteering does not just add years to life. It adds life to years.
But here is what really struck me as I read through the findings. The benefits that showed up most strongly were not the physical ones, although those matter. The benefits that shone brightest were the ones we cannot always measure with machines or tests.
Pride. Empowerment. Motivation. Social support. Sense of community. Purpose.
These are the things that make life worth living. These are the answers to the questions that every single day asks of us. "Do I matter anymore?" "Is there a reason to get out of bed?" "Am I still part of something?"
And the research says yes. Yes, you matter. Yes, there is reason. Yes, you are still part of something, especially when you reach out and become part of something bigger than yourself.
Now, I know what some of you are thinking. "I am too old." "I am too tired." "I have nothing to offer." "They do not need me."
The research says otherwise. In fact, it found something rather beautiful. Those of us in older age actually receive greater health benefits from volunteering than younger people do. The older we are, the more we gain from giving.
Why might that be? Well, I have my theories, and I suspect you do too. When we are younger, we are busy building, accumulating, striving. Volunteering is something we do, but it is one of many things. When we are older, when the building is mostly done and the striving has quieted down, volunteering becomes something different. It becomes a way of mattering. A way of staying connected. A way of answering the question that retirement and loss and change keep asking, which is, "Who are you now?"
The research suggests that volunteering compensates for the loss of the health and wellbeing benefits we used to get from our work. It eases the adjustment to this season of life. And while the studies are not entirely sure whether retirement itself explains this, they do know that the benefits of volunteering are distinct from work. They come from something deeper. From altruism. From self-actualization. From the simple human truth that we are wired to help one another.
Here is another finding that stopped me. The social connections we make through volunteering have a knock-on effect. They lead to other benefits. They protect us from negative outcomes. They create a web of support that catches us when we fall.
Think about that. When you volunteer, you are not just doing a task. You are building a net. A net that will hold you when you need holding. A net that connects you to others who will become part of your life in ways you cannot predict.
And here is the part that really matters for our conversation about answering life's questions. The research found that volunteering predicted self-reported health, functioning, and mental wellbeing much better than it predicted objective measures like medical conditions or frailty.
What does that mean? It means that how we feel about our lives, our sense of purpose and connection and meaning, may matter as much or more than the physical indicators we usually focus on. It means that flourishing mentally, feeling alive, engaged, and useful, predicts how long we live even when controlling for physical disease.
This is not small. This is huge. This is permission to stop obsessing about every ache and pain and start focusing on what makes us feel alive.
Here is what I am asking you to consider today. What question is life asking you right now? Through the news that makes you sad. Through the loneliness that creeps in on Sunday afternoons? Through the sense that maybe your best days are behind you?
What if the answer is not something you buy, take, or acquire? What if the answer is something you give?
What if the question is answered by showing up at a school to read to children who need someone to listen? What if it is answered by delivering meals to people who cannot get out? What if it is answered by sitting with someone who is dying, or planting a garden in a neglected lot, or answering phones at a place that helps people in crisis?
The research says it works. The research says you will live longer, feel better, function more fully, and find meaning you thought was lost.
But more than the research, more than the studies and statistics, there is the quiet truth that you already know. The times you have felt most alive are probably the times you have given most freely. The moments you have treasured longest are probably the moments you forgot yourself entirely in service to someone else.
That is the question asking. That is the answer waiting.
And the beautiful thing is that it does not require grand gestures. It does not require perfection or training or endless energy. It just requires showing up. Reaching out. Being present.
The research proves it. But I suspect you already knew.