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06.06.2026

💫 Truth and Fiction: 8 Popular Misconceptions About Charity

We often want to help but hold back due to doubts. Some people fear their donations won't reach the recipient. Others are sure that charity is only for the rich. Still others believe that helping children and supporting families requires huge sums of money. In reality, these fears hide myths that prevent us from taking action. Let's look at the most common misconceptions and see what actually lies behind them. The first myth: you need a lot of money to help. In reality, even small regular donations add up to a stable fundraising effort. A charitable organization can pay for rehabilitation or buy medicine precisely thanks to dozens of modest transfers. The second misconception: volunteers only hand out food and clean up areas. In fact, volunteers often work with documents, manage social media, organize workshops for children — their skills can be more useful than money. The third myth: if you make a one-time transfer, the problem is solved. But helping a family in crisis is a marathon, not a sprint. Regular donations provide stability, not a one-time boost. The fourth misconception: charity is always about pain and tears. In reality, many projects are built on joy: holidays for children, parent training, creative activities. The fifth myth: all fundraisers are scams. Yes, there is a risk, but transparent reports and open statistics make it possible to distinguish real help from a fake. The sixth misconception: only young and healthy people can help. Retirees often become the most reliable volunteers, and people with disabilities are active participants in information support. The seventh myth: if you can't give a lot, it's better to give nothing. But imagine: a hundred people chipped in one hundred rubles each — that's ten thousand for rehabilitation. Every penny matters. The eighth misconception: helping children ends when the child is discharged from the hospital. In reality, rehabilitation and family adaptation require resources for many more months. So what can you do in practice? You can set up a regular donation — it's like a subscription to kindness. You can offer your professional skills: an accountant can help with reporting, a designer with visuals, a psychologist with consultations. You can share information on social media: a repost often brings more benefit than a personal contribution. And finally, you can give away things you no longer use — books, clothes, toys. The main thing is not to be afraid to take the first step. Charity doesn't start with a million, but with the decision not to stand aside.
Together we can save the lives of children who need help!
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