Unpaid work has a place in my life. Through my various volunteering experiences, I have gained skills, met new people, and positively affected my community. Through volunteering, I have made deeper connections with people I have already known. Even when I have not particularly enjoy a task, I have learned about myself. I know, for example, that archives can be interesting places to visit, but that I do not want to work in one. Volunteering leads to unexpected places and leads me to challenge myself. I find volunteering rewarding.
I have volunteered in a number of ways in the past, in both long term and short-term capacities. Some of my service has been grunt work -- such as sorting and moving donations to a non-profit's rummage sale or helping new students move into dormitories -- and some of it has been more intellectual. As the secretary for a club/organization, I have recorded minutes to distribute to group members. I have contacted outside organizations to ask for donations, potential speakers, and other assistance. While serving in one position, I tutored elementary school students and also helped lead a training session for other members of the organization. I have sold merchandise, manned food stands, and staffed a registration table. I have directed event attendees to various activity locations and answered attendees questions. Each experience has been valuable in one way or another.
Most of my direct library-related volunteering has been through one-time sessions. Because my schedule is a bit unpredictable, these types of events work better than something requiring a
long-term commitment. I have helped label, repair, and organize items in local school libraries, helped inventory a special library's collection, and assisted with a book festival. I have become active on the listserv for one of the professional organizations I have joined. Although my service on this listserv is nothing formal, I count it as volunteering. I have been considering trying to begin more long-term service, particularly something in a public library's children's department, but have been wary of making a long-term, location-based commitment when I am uncertain how long I will be in the area. Fortunately, a virtual opportunity presented itself last week; I agreed to help compile a list of position advertisements for a job-seeking group I joined.
Most of the direct library volunteering I have done has been opportunistic. Someone else has organized a volunteer event or asked for volunteers and I have jumped on the chance. In response to the recent spurt of conversations regarding volunteering, I plan to take more control of my unpaid work. I will formalize my volunteering through targeted opportunities.