I've spent the last year or so minimizing the amount of harm I do (going vegan, minimizing environmental impact), but recently I've really struggled finding a difference between not actively doing harm and preventing harm.
If this difference, that I always intuitevely thought was there, doesn't exist I don't know how I can justify not working 80 hour weeks and ever buying fancy stuff I don't need. Of course you can make arguments to maintain some form of a social life and some other things being neccessary to maintain productivity over the long haul, but I think if you argue that that leads to anything close to a normal life you are being disingenuous.
I am still new to the community and have only gone to a couple of meetings, but it does not seem to me most people here are acutually completely commiting their life to helping others. I'd love to hear your reasoning for that, because I don't want to have to do that either, lol.
Good question! I share that intuition that preventing harm is a really good thing to do, and I find striking the right balance between self-sacrifice and pursuing my own interests difficult.
I think this is probably wrong for most people. If you make yourself unhappy by trying to force yourself to make sacrifices you don't want to make, I think most people will be much less productive. And I think that most people actually need a fairly normal social life etc. to avoid that. I believe this because I've seen and heard stories of people burning out from trying to work too hard, and I've come close myself.
I think the best way to have a large impact probably looks like working as hard as you sustainably can (for most people, I think this is working hard in a normal 9-5 work week or less), and spending enough time thinking seriously about the best strategy for you to make the biggest difference. It might also involve donating money, but again I think it's a good use of money to spend some money on what makes you happy, to prevent resentment and burn out.