Content Overview 
- Summary
- There Are Many Benefits To Volunteering
- Don't Volunteer Beyond Your Physical Or Emotional Ability
- Consider The Cost That May Be Involved With Volunteering
- Volunteering Can Help Make A Return To Work Easier
- If You're Working, Volunteering Can Help Keep Your Current Skills Sharp Or Give You The Chance To Learn New Skills.
- Check To See Whether Volunteering Can Cause You To Lose Private Or Governmental Benefits
- Assess Your Volunteering Preferences
- Volunteering From Home
- How To Find A Volunteering Opportunity
Volunteering
Volunteering Can Help Make A Return To Work Easier
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If you are not working, whether it is because you are out of a job, a student or currently on disability and planning to return to work, volunteering can make the transition to work much easier.
- Contacts you make at your volunteer organization, and the organization itself, can help you in your job search.
- The time you spend volunteering can help to bridge gaps in your resume created by time on disability. (You don't have to indicate on your resume that a volunteer position was not a paying job!)
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Volunteering full-time, you can test your readiness for a return to full-time work.
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