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Giving is Transformational Giving is contagious. Conscious giving can be infinite.

By Ivan Misner Edited by Heather Wilkerson

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

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The world can be a dark and contentious place. Illness, famine, poverty, hostility, and desperation are all around us. But it doesn't have to be that way. The world can be a better place. We can make a choice — a choice to be a voice of change, a change that can transform the world we live in. Entrepreneurs are well-positioned to help make that change.

Years ago, I implemented a phrase into the fabric of the core values of my company. That simple, two-word phrase — Givers Gain® — was a game-changer in giving people a different framework relating to the way they network with others.

Giving is an idea that proclaims we can be something bigger than ourselves. It's a reaffirmation that our lives have significant meaning and that, through community, we can be our best selves.

Related: Giving More Increases Your Happiness

For people who get it, this philosophy unlocks a whole new world of meaning and opportunity. So, our job is to help people "get it." More importantly, we can be intentional about helping people reach that place.

In 2010, Greater Good Magazine wrote that the National Institutes of Health found that when people give to others, "it activates regions of the brain associated with pleasure, social connection, and trust, creating a "warm glow' effect. Scientists also believe that altruistic behavior releases endorphins in the brain, producing the positive feeling known as the helper's high."

Researchers at the University of California – Berkley found that people who volunteered to multiple organizations were "44 percent less likely to die over a five-year period than were non-volunteers," and John Cacioppo, author of Loneliness: Human Nature and the Need for Social Connection, says, "the more extensive the reciprocal altruism born of social connection ...the greater the advance toward health, wealth, and happiness."

There is a profound ripple effect that takes place through the act of consciously practicing a giving philosophy. I have seen the dramatic impact one person can have on another. I've observed the surging ripple that takes place as an act impacts one person and the next person and the next person, and so on. Within a community or a network, the ripple effect that takes place from this philosophy can influence hundreds or thousands of people. In fact, I believe it can influence the world.

Giving is contagious. Conscious giving can be infinite.

Related: 4 Ways Companies Foster a Culture of Giving Back

There is a Chinese saying: "If you want happiness for an hour, take a nap. If you want happiness for a day, go fishing. If you want happiness for a year, inherit a fortune. If you want happiness for a lifetime, help somebody." For centuries, the greatest thinkers have suggested the same thing: Happiness is found in giving.

The results of this philosophy cannot be observed as a straight line in life. It is a complex zigzag of interconnected relationships that lead to a place of contentment and fulfillment, and it begins with the right mindset. It's about taking off your bib and putting on an apron. It's not about what's in it for you, or how much can you get — it's about serving and helping others in a very conscious way. Not doing so in a way that ignores the fact that there are takers in the world, but in a way that consciously chooses to find your fellow givers in the world. It's easy to be cynical and think that the help you can offer is negligible, but it only takes a small gesture to change someone's life.

We've all had people who are in "our story." They are the people we talk about who have changed our life in some way. However, there is something even more important: The real question is not who's in our story but whose story are we in? Whose life have we made a difference in? This is what creates a meaningful life. It's about being a role model for the people around you.

We often look at the world and hope that someday things will be different. But as my friend and author Sam Horn says, "someday is not a day of the week." If we wait for someday, we are waiting for others to make the first move.

"Someday" can be today and it can start with us. Today is as good a day as any to be our "someday." We can all make a difference starting today. And that difference starts with a transformational change within us in how we deal with the people around us and the world beyond them.

We would be giving without a transactional expectation and giving to people in all parts of our life appropriately. We would understand that we give what we can afford and that it's OK to gain in such a society — a humble society where saying thank you is the norm.

Related: These Inspiring Startups Make Giving a Core Part of Their Missions

Start small but start today. Begin local but think global. Influence one life, and you begin to influence the world. Just start with the person next to you and know that: "You may not make a world of difference, but you can make a difference in the world."

Based on material from Infinite Giving, The 7 Principles of Givers Gain by Dr. Ivan Misner, Greg Davies, and Julian Lewis.

Ivan Misner

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® VIP

Bestselling Author

Dr. Ivan Misner is a New York Times bestselling author and co-author of the bestselling book, Networking Like a Pro (Entrepreneur Press 2017). He is also the founder and chief visionary officer of BNI, the world's largest referral marketing and networking organization.

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