Vancouver Sun

Volunteeri­ng can help keep optimism alive

Keep social awareness active by living vicariousl­y through young people, Craig and Marc Kielburger write.

- Craig and Marc Kielburger are the co-founders of the WE movement, which includes WE Charity, ME to WE Social Enterprise and WE Day. For more dispatches from WE, check out WE Stories at we.org

Sometimes it seems that life is bookended with optimism. Young people are known idealists and seniors develop a new-found appreciati­on for community. But what happens in between?

Growing up, people are quick to get involved in a cause. University campuses are hotbeds of political activity; many students take time off to volunteer. With grey hair and wrinkles come a renewed focus on legacy. Retirement-age career makeovers are increasing­ly popular for those concerned with the world they’re leaving behind.

The result is today’s youthled fight for gun control and the 30-year tradition of the Raging Grannies advocating for the environmen­t. Closer to home, young Canadians are the most likely to volunteer while seniors dedicate the most time. Kids join marches; retirees join charity boards.

Somewhere in between, we risk losing our optimism. An idealist at 20 can become a cynic by 40.

A while back, we wrote about the power of youth activists. Now, we’re calling on adults to take a page from their book.

We get it: Life can get in the way. Mortgages, bills, RRSP contributi­ons — those middle years are also the time we have the most responsibi­lity. Idealism may not discrimina­te based on age but rather the amount of free time we have.

“It’s not that people lose their passion, but things can fall by the wayside,” explains Kerrie Everitt, a Vancouver mother who followed her daughter, Capri, around the world on a socially conscious quest.

The 13-year-old sang national anthems in 80 countries to raise money for orphaned children. Everitt notes the raw materials she gave her daughter — books that raised important social questions, a world view that embraced others. But Everitt says it was her daughter’s passion that turned her into an activist.

It’s unlikely that cynicism sets in at a certain age, or with parenthood and the onset of more responsibi­lities. Our ideals don’t change, but our list of priorities does as our focus shifts from the wider world to the world under our roof.

It’s not an either-or choice.

All parents want what’s best for their kids. That often includes a good education, enriching extracurri­culars and opportunit­ies for growth.

Ensuring our kids grow up with clean water and in inclusive communitie­s is as important as ensuring they have university tuition.

So let’s take some action for these social efforts, just as we would make arrangemen­ts for education or enrichment. We look after our children not just by providing for their success but by building a better world for them to grow up in.

The first step to reviving youthful optimism, says Everitt, is to live vicariousl­y through your children. Learn about the issues they care about, make an action plan and write letters alongside them. Pretty soon, you’ll have rediscover­ed your sense that anything is possible.

If your seven-year-old points at a homeless man and wonders where his house is, stop and ask. Buy the man a meal. Don’t ignore these childish impulses, lest they disappear.

The young activists taking on climate change in the U.S. courts or raising awareness about the injustice faced by Indigenous communitie­s across Canada are doing incredible work.

It’s time more adults joined them.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? It’s easy to become more cynical as we age, but regaining a sense of idealism could be as simple as lending a hand to any number of worthwhile causes.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O It’s easy to become more cynical as we age, but regaining a sense of idealism could be as simple as lending a hand to any number of worthwhile causes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada