I am only 14 years old, but I have decided that when I grow up I am going to be an effective altruist. I am obviously not going to share my identity, but my current plan for when I grow up is to literally donate as much as I possibly can; this would obviously involve spending very little on myself, likely I would be working a very high-paying job, but living in very low-quality conditions, probably I would live in a camper van, working around 14 hours a day. I am not making this post for anyone to tell me I am naive or that I have no idea what that kind of life will bring; I know that most likely, I will hate my life. That is not to say I hate my life now: I have a lot of friends, I have a great family, and right now, I do love life. But it is about the future when I will be donating everything. I also know that most likely, nobody will want to live with me, because who besides me would want to live that kind of life? I have spent hours searching the internet, and I have not found a single person who has ever donated everything. However, that is what this post is about: I am trying to find anyone on this forum who also will be or is donating everything to charity. I am not going to share my identity or anything, but I did want to see if anyone else here is actually going to donate everything.
Incredible resolve, Steven. It’s rare to see someone—let alone a 14-year-old—grapple so squarely with how much good a single salary can buy. You’re right: a single $5 k donation to AMF plausibly saves a life, so every extra dollar you push toward the margin matters enormously.
I sometimes feel that EA discussions lean too far toward “Careful, you’ll burn out—dial it back.” Burnout is real, but the analysis often weights personal discomfort as if it were on par with someone else’s entire life. Even if an austere lifestyle shortens a career a bit, the extra years of near-maximal giving you do manage could still dominate the equation. The stakes are that high.
Keep refining the plan, of course—experiment with smaller pledges first, protect your health so you can give longer—but never lose sight of the basic arithmetic that inspired you. The world needs more people willing to do what you’re contemplating. I’m cheering you on.
I completely agree with what you are saying, thank you for the comment!