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Volunteering, Belonging, and the Power of Connection

By Richard Myers
Posted: 02/21/2026
Tags: volunteering

 

Being a member of Pasadena Village gives me purpose and focus that I might not otherwise feel. It helps me maintain a sense of relevance and reminds me that I still have something meaningful to contribute. For me, that contribution most often takes the form of volunteering. Volunteering is how I participate, how I stay connected, and how I help sustain the community that, in turn, sustains me.

When I reflect on what Pasadena Village means to me, one idea rises above the rest: it gives me the opportunity to connect. The Village doesn’t hand me friendships or activities. What it offers is the space where those things can happen. If I want connection, I have to participate — to show up, to reach out, to initiate. That, in many ways, is exactly why I came.

Pasadena Village is a member-run community. Its primary focus is community itself, and members are the ones who create it. That reality suggests something important: volunteering is what makes the Village work. But within the Village, volunteering has a wonderfully broad meaning.

Simply attending an activity helps build community. Picking up the phone to check in with another member contributes to connection. Calling someone you met at an event and inviting them for coffee is volunteering twice — once by showing up, and again by following up to deepen the relationship.

There are also more formal opportunities to help. Members call those who are housebound, provide rides, cook meals for someone recovering from illness, or offer other practical support. These acts of care strengthen the fabric of the Village and ensure no one feels alone.

If you have an interest that isn’t represented, you can start a group. This is both leadership and connection — a chance to shape the community while meeting others who share your passions.

Some members contribute by helping manage the Village itself, serving on teams that keep things running. A smaller number take on the responsibility of board service, guiding the organization at a governance level. Not everyone will serve in these roles, but each level of involvement strengthens the whole.

At the same time, not every member is able to volunteer in active ways. Health challenges, mobility issues, family responsibilities, or difficult life circumstances can limit participation. Yet these members remain valued and essential. By allowing others to provide rides, make calls, deliver meals, or offer companionship, they make it possible for care and connection to circulate within the community. Receiving help is not passive; it allows others to live out the Village’s spirit of service. In this way, simply staying engaged — answering the phone, welcoming a visit, participating when possible — becomes its own form of contribution. By remaining part of the circle of care, they help sustain the mutual support that defines the Village.

And the truth is, we don’t need everyone to volunteer. We just need enough.

For me, volunteering provides a sense of relevance and purpose. It transforms membership into participation and participation into connection. Yet the Village also reminds me that belonging does not depend on constant activity. Community holds us in different ways at different times.

The more members who are able and willing to contribute, the more we can do for one another. And in that shared effort — whether through leadership, service, participation, receiving support, or simply presence — the Village becomes what it is meant to be: a community we create together.

 

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