Charities & Causes

Charity requests

Charities & Causes

Posted by: Izzie

20th May 2025 05:24pm

Do you find that when you give to a charity, they keep bombarding you with requests for further /ongoing donations? Especially in these times with the cost of living crisis, how do you deal with these requests? And do these requests make you feel guilty if you can't afford to give the same amount, less, or not at all?

Comments 6

jtmorri
  • 8th Jul 2025 01:57pm

I haven't engaged with charities per say for a long time. I do remember when I did you would continuously receive further requests for donations. So, yes, I did find them frustrating and annoying in the past. I would ask them to take my name off of their database and not contact me again.

I am also very mindful not to take a survey or play any form of game associated with a charity, as all they want is your contact number and email so then they can call you or continuously email you to ask for a donation. In this way I avoid the annoyance of requests for donations today and going forward.

The causes I do give to are The Lord Mayor's Appeal for disasters that are local to me. You don't get hounded by them ever as they realise you are donating to a specific cause to immediately help your community and people.

I would never feel guilty about not donating. I also don't have an issue with saying no to someone. In the past I have found the person on the other end of the phone stunned and taken back by me saying no outright and can't they stop as I don't wish to listen to their spiel. We all have the choice when, how, why and to whom we donate, the frequency and amount. If I wish to donate to a cause I can find the information myself and undertake it without someone pressuring me into doing it for a specific cause or a time that suits them.

AdelaideM
  • 8th Jul 2025 11:44am

I find the requests incredibly frustrating.
With cost of living being what it is, giving anything is a fair sacrifice. To then constantly get calls and emails suggesting that we should find even more to give is, I believe, fairly tone deaf.

They make me less likely to give. Nowdays I choose who to donate to entirely online, and if I get calls I tell them that while appreciate they're just trying to do their job, I don't want any more calls. I have chosen to stop giving in the past to specific charities who wouldn't stop calling or emailing.

They don't make me feel guilty, they make me angry that while I have the strength to say no, they may be pressuring other people to give more than they can afford. I believe it's incredibly important that we all donate what we can, but putting pressure on to people is not a kind way to do it.

jtmorri
  • 8th Jul 2025 02:00pm
I find the requests incredibly frustrating.
With cost of living being what it is, giving anything is a fair sacrifice. To then constantly get calls and emails suggesting that we should find...

I agree totally.

cazter
  • 29th May 2025 06:36am

These days with the cost of living in Australia being so high, it's even harder to have money to donate to any charities. Also, I don't like how a lot of the money donated goes to the CEOs of the charity rather than to the people or cause the money is actually supposed to help. I am not feeling guilty at all because I am finding it hard to pay my bills.

cazter
  • 8th Jul 2025 09:00pm
I totally agree with your sentiment about charities. There have been previous chats, and my opinion is that there are too many of them for the same cause which is inefficient with funds and like...

What you mentioned about the CEO's makes a lot of sense!

jtmorri
  • 8th Jul 2025 01:59pm
These days with the cost of living in Australia being so high, it's even harder to have money to donate to any charities. Also, I don't like how a lot of the money donated goes to the CEOs of the...

I totally agree with your sentiment about charities. There have been previous chats, and my opinion is that there are too many of them for the same cause which is inefficient with funds and like you believe it is wasted on CEO's etc who sometimes start a charity themselves to create a job for themselves.

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