Sorry for the long title but a friend just hit me for money cause she's participating in the Marathon for Breast Cancer or something like that. In this case, I gladly gave, because she's my friend and the cause is good.
But I remember when I first arrived in Montreal from Asia via Europe, two continents where the concept of walkathon, danceathon, whateverathon is completely unknown (at least at the time).
Practically every other week, a little boy or a little girl would ring my doorbell, and when I answered, asked me for money for some school project. I was supposed to sign on his/her sponsorship pledge list whereby, in exchange for my 5 bucks, he/she would eat a pie or skip rope or ride a bike, etc. for a certain period of time... In other words, he/she would do whatever fun stuff he/she was going to do anyway, but because it's a charity drive, it's considered to be a great sacrifice he/she is doing for the school project, so I have to pay him/her to make it worthwhile. And the more I pay, the longer he/she will do that fun stuff.
Did I describe the something-or-other-athon properly and correctly? Now, can someone explain the whole nonsense to me?
Tuesday, June 06, 2006
Give me money for my charity and in exchange I'll do something completely irrelevant to you that I enjoy doing anyway
We're admirable cause we walk against Breast Cancer
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2 comments:
I believe it is how certain people alleviate their guilt for not taking a larger part in curing society's problems.
Thank you Bob for posting. Actually, what I don't understand is: why not just ask people to donate? Why go through the whole pretense of doing some physical activity in exchange? As a donor, I'd rather just get a receipt for tax purpose. How does the fact that someone will walk a long distance for my donation benefit me in any way, or entice me to give money if I don't already have the intention of making a donation?
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