Fidg, first off, I'm TOTALLY prepared to be challenged. Hell, if I wasn't, I wouldn't be as active here as I am. Secondly, I'm not just playing Devil's Advocate here, for I truly believe in what I am saying.
My thoughts on this goes beyond the definitions quoted above. I'm trying to put what is at the basic core of why we do what we do when it comes to helping others.
Here's a personal case in point. I raised my twin boys who were both born with mild cerebral palsy and both with IQ's in the low 70's, as a single parent since they were 8 years old. There mother, who couldn't handle their disabilities spiraled out of control with deep meth and cocaine addictions and ended up in prison.
When I saw my attorney to seek a divorce and full custody of my kids, he asked me if I was sure they were mine. I thought back at all the partying that we used to do eight years prior and told him that there was a possibility that they weren't mine. He then said, "Well then, why not get a paternity test done to confirm if they are or are not yours, 'cause if they're not yours, you can just walk away from all this". Man, I remember like it was yesterday. I thought about that question for about 5 minutes, and then came to the conclusion that I did not want to take that test, because as far as I was concerned, they were mine. After 8 years of love and bonding, there were as much mine as they could be and that if I took that test and found out that they were not mine, it could possibly taint that relationship forever more and that was the last thing that I wanted to happen. That lawyer looked at me like I was nuts for wanting to take custody of two boys who were disabled and were possibly not mine to begin with.
So........here we are 22 years later. I raised them both as a single parent while at the same time, running a 40 million dollar a year business (36 store consumer electronics chain in SoCal). Between my business and my boys, every minute of every day was consumed.
Now many would say, man, there's not many fathers who would do that, and many fathers, even if they KNEW without a shadow of a doubt that the kids were his, would just walk away from that situation rather than be "burdened" with those expenses, both in time and money, for the rest of their lives in raising two kids with disabilities.
Would you say that that was a totally selfless act? See, to me, it was not. For me, the decision that I made in that lawyers office had to be made as I made it simply because I couldn't live with myself if I had done anything else. It would have left a hole in my very being that I would NEVER have been able to fill.
So..........the fact is, if I didn't need to fill that hole, if I didn't need to fill that void that would have been there for the rest of my life if I didn't make the decisions that I made, I never would have made them.
Didn't mean to get into all this personal shit, but I think it's the best example of explaining where I am coming from with all this.
People give to charities, people volunteer their time to give to others, but do you think for one moment that they would do these things if it didn't make them feel good, if it didn't provide a brighter flame of humanity in their hearts?