What are people's journeys to caring much more about others?
What are people's journeys to caring much more about what is really true even if that is inconvenient?
An example of an inconvenience to changing your mind (the classic example): changing your beliefs about the world can often mean having a gap between what you say you value, what your life has looked like up until now and what the world is truly like (which human beings don't like and makes us want to change either our claimed values, our actions or our beliefs about the world).
I was curious about what people's intuitions are (maybe from their own experience of how they changed over time or from observing others).
EDIT: I posted this question ages ago then decided to take it down and edit it for clarity and then it's just sat in my drafts for a weirdly long time so my apologies to the people who replied whose replies disappeared for a while while this was unpublished.
I've since put more of my thoughts on how this question relates to community-building in this post and my replies (the top-level reply outlines the various threads because I had way too many thoughts for just one coherent comment) to this lovely comment on it
For me, I feel like the big difference was around taking action, more than the other two. I heard about EA years ago, but only took action when I had already developed the habit of doing a good deed, however small or unimpactful, each day. Acting on a moral impulse, for me, became habitual. So when I revisited EA, I decided to actually start donating, because the move from "Someone should do something" -> "I should do something" -> Doing something had become much more a force of habit for myself.
I guess the lesson for this is that for people like me, something like Try Giving and committing just 1% of income or something small would have been a solid entry point, getting me into the habit of doing good.