 Have you ever heard of the sort of do-good-feel phenomenon? It's like when you do something good, you feel happier. Think about it in this way. Everyone wants to be valued in some way or another. They want to be valued by other people, but they also want to be think of themselves as good people. So when you do any meeting collectivity, anything with a purpose, it gives you that sense of purpose and that raises your self-esteem about who you are, how you share yourself to others, and that makes you feel good. Generosity is not reserved for the billionaires or people with lots of time. It's for you and me. So yes, everybody can practice generosity and you don't have to be a billionaire and you don't have to be somebody retired with lots of time on their hand. I suspect that it's the busiest people and people with the least resources that tend to be the most generous most of the time. So yes, a dollar counts a minute of your time, taking time to smile at somebody, being gracious. As you can practice generosity in multiple ways, you don't have to have lots of time and money. It's the act of wanting to help somebody else.