The Complexity of Toilet Paper
Giving should feel generous, so why does it so often feel heavy? We’re sitting in the stall with one of the most human problems out there: the urge to help colliding with overwhelm, doubt, and the fear that whatever we do will never be enough. Phyllis Martin brings decades in philanthropy and nonprofit work, Mark Pollock gets honest about feeling inadequate and confused by what happens after you write the check, and Al Emmerich pushes us to separate real generosity from hidden expectations. We talk about why some causes are easier to support than others, how personal stories shape charitable donations, and how quickly “I want to help” turns into “I want to control.” We dig into donor trust, transparency, and the simple move most of us avoid: asking better questions. Call the organization. Learn how the money moves. Ask what changed because donors gave, and what they learned when things did not go as planned. We also name something that rarely gets said out loud: you can stop giving for valid reasons, including frustration, shifting priorities, or losing hope. Then we zoom out from nonprofits entirely. Giving can be time, mentoring, emotional support, and a moment of presence that costs nothing but changes everything. One story in particular reminds us that generosity can look like a hug offered to a grieving stranger, no fixing required, just humanity. If you’ve ever wondered how to choose a charity, how to give without guilt, or how to make your philanthropy feel aligned instead of complicated, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who overthinks giving, leave a review, and tell us: what does “enough” generosity look like to you?
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