So I have just read Peter Singer's book "the life you can save", and I can't stop thinking about effective altruism as a moral obligation in everything that I do. Singer's drowning child analogy refers to money, but also time, as things that must be sacrificed in order to be moral. Greed and Gluttony I can manage, but Sloth? The pressure in knowing that I can't sit around and do f**k all - that I am a bad person for doing so - leads me to doing it more!
Some insight: I am 17, live in the UK, am anxious and struggling to get a part-time job due to the pandemic and college work, and my household's annual income is <£30,000. After reading TLYCS, I feel that I ought to get a job, otherwise I am wasting the privilege that I have, that puts me above those in developing countries who, at my age , have to work to earn pitiful amounts of money to survive: It would be wrong for me not to get a job so that I can donate.
How should I approach this effectively?
I think gift giving and receiving are very positive and worth doing! It's good to make an effort to show you've been paying attention to what the people in your life enjoy and that you want to make them happy.