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On a Saturday afternoon, you find most kids outside playing made-up games or dangling from monkey bars. Kids were made for the outdoors, with their boundless energy and the ease in which they make friends. It’s no different for Kameron, a normal, fun-loving 7-year-old girl who loves to draw out the world’s longest hopscotch on the sidewalk.
In between jump-rope contests, basketball shootouts and skateboard races, Kameron takes time to do something special for her neighbors. Kameron’s community is home to a good mix of young families and wizened elderly neighbors whose children have long since left home. Kameron first starts waving to them. Most of them smile back.
Then Kameron decides that some of them need a little cheering up. So she runs home, grabs her violin and makes the rounds. “Can I play you a song?” she asks, after knocking on the door.
Gustav smiles wide. He has a beautiful mop of white hair and a mild accent. He grew up in Scandinavia and is a wood finisher. His wife Vivian has a smile that fills their tiny home. She peeks at Kameron from beneath Gustav’s right arm. She stands awkwardly, bent at the waist and her ankles rounded out. It looks terribly uncomfortable. Vivian has had muscular dystrophy for over 20 years. Gustav is her full-time caregiver. They’ve replaced their daily walks with afternoon drives, but even those are getting too difficult for Vivian.
Gus lets Kameron in, and Vivian takes hold of both their elbows and shuffles to her chair. On the table beside her is a photo of her with Gus when they were young and adventuresome, traveling around Europe, Egypt and Iceland. In the photo, Vivian is stunning, and Gus is dashing and handsome.
“Want me to play your favorite song?” Kameron asks. “Of course,” Gus answers. It is the only song Kameron knows.
The small violin rests seriously under Kameron’s chin. She plays as best she can, scratching out the notes to “Edelweiss” in her best beginner effort. Vivian taps her knee visibly to keep rhythm for Kameron. Gus holds Vivian’s other hand. It’s not the performance that is moving, but the tune of memories it brings, flooding back with the sound of a full orchestra.
“You’ve been practicing,” Vivian says.
Kameron smiles. “See you next week!”
Happiness... PassItOn.com®
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The Key to Life.
Father-and-son locksmiths Phil and Philip Mortillaro share the simple wisdom of being happy. From the StoryCorps collection.
Simone Biles Springs Her Way Into History.
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The Legacy of Dorothy Vaughan.
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Beyond the Moon with an Eye on Mars.
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Anatomy of a Bestseller.
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More Than Just Dancing
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A Most Unlikely Friendship.
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Dream Big.
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A Hero for Accessibility.
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The Mistakes We Learn From and Build On.
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The History of Us.
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Shakespeare and Love.
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Everybody Can Be a Hero.
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Something Healthy for All of Us
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The Least Likely to Help.
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Miracle or Magician?
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It’s Not Your Lifespan, it’s Your Wingspan.
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Courage in a New World.
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What we Learn About Ourselves from the Boys in the Boat.
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Bigger than Life.
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The Woman Who Talks to Trees.
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Hope. Dream. Become.
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Going the Distance.
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The Friendship Heard Round the World.
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The Future Belongs to Kids.
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If You Love Dogs, You’ll Love this Story.
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Benny’s Bees.
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Engineering a Better Community.
Barron Prize winner and high schooler Adeline Smith co-founded Growing the STEM, a nonprofit that creates math and science programs for students in 14 underserved Idaho schools.
If You Don’t Know Anything About Orangutans, You Don’t Know Jack.
Meet Jack Dalton, Gloria Barron Prize Winner and the nature conservationist who started by saving the orangutans at age 8.
Rescuing a Vessel — and a Family’s Memories.
A boat at the bottom of the lake for 30 years and a renewed appreciation for life when it is restored.
Finding a New Family at the Mountain Man Rendezvous.
How a Vietnam vet pulled himself out of drug addiction by going back in the past.
Reforesting the Amazon, 100 Million Trees at a Time.
How skydiving legend Luigi Cani’s daring stunt is aimed at breathing new life into our world.
The Last Person you Think of Should Probably be the First.
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Using the Write Words
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Give Peace a Chance.
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Laughter is the Best Teacher.
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Harmony in Hardship.
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A Custom of Respect.
How the Japanese soccer team brings sportsmanship to the game.
Friendship Dispels the Darkest Nights in Alaska.
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If a Man Asks for Bread, Will You Give Him a Stone?
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Overcoming Our Own Worst Mistakes.
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Climb Higher, Leave Behind what Ails you.
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Everybody Gets on Base.
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Teamwork that Saves Lives.
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Kids who are changing their world.
An Impossible Journey.
How John Wesley Powell navigated the Colorado River and Grand Canyon in wooden boats.
Laughter is the Best Medicine.
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Unlikely Friends with Common Roots.
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‘The Velveteen Rabbit’ – How we Discover what Makes us Real … is Love.
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Never Too Small to Make a Big Difference.
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Billy Mills
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The Taming of the West Featuring Diamond Kitty.
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Understanding Our Universe.
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A Voice for Our Time.
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Living Alone doesn’t Mean you Have to be Lonely.
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Getting 100 on her Final Exam.
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Doubling Back for a Friend.
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Family of 7 Adopts a Grandpa.
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The Birth of Superman.
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A Diamond in the Making.
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Cross Safely.
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Going the Distance from the Farm to the Record Books.
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Bee Productive.
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Are You Smarter Than a Seventh-Grade Business Owner?
How Kidpreneur Alejandro Buxton is making money for college and helping others.
Out of the Village and On to Break Records.
The incredible story of Makazole Mapimpi, the first South African to score in a Rugby World Cup Final. Against almost impossible personal odds, Makazole succeeded, a triumph of the human spirit.
The Brotherhood in Sports Goes Beyond the Field.
How a men’s rugby team supported one of their own.
Taking Responsibility.
How one high school student supported her family during the pandemic.
A Legend On and Off the Court.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar sold his four championship rings and three MVP trophies for $2.8 million. Then he donated all of the money to support youth education programs
From Homeless to Johns Hopkins.
Life is never fair. But if you work hard enough, and help someone along the way, you give yourself a better chance to make it.
The Art of Pitching.
A little confidence at the right time goes a long way.
Not Out of the Way, Along the Way.
Taking the long way to school makes for a long friendship.
To the Coaches of Pint-sized Athletes.
All year round, you’ll find brave dads and moms standing in the rink, on the field and in the gymnasium — surrounded by eager eyes and short attention spans. Here’s to the volunteers in our communities who teach our kids life lessons and never forget the orange slices.
The World Awaits You.
The story of the first woman to circumnavigate the world.
Good Food. Good Friends. Good for the Future.
Barron Prize winner Abby Yoon gets her hands dirty in the garden so at-risk kids can get fresh produce for lunch.
Road Trip Across America.
A discovery of what unites us.
No Matter Who You Are, You Can Always Help.
The day Muhammad Ali rushed to save a stranger who was about to take his own life.
The Little Things that Make the Biggest Difference.
How one man created a forest the size of Central Park by planting one tree a day.
The Agony, the Ecstasy, and the Redemption that Olympic Competition Brings.
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Lift Your Voice, Use Your Mind, Lift Others.
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For the Cost of a Box of Cereal.
How just noticing makes all the difference in the world.
Reach for the Stars…
No Matter How Long it Takes.
Bear with Me!
The story of Wojtek the bear, who joined the Polish Army in WWll.
Wax On, Wax Off: The Pat Morita Story.
Known primarily for his role as Mr. Miyagi, Pat Morita is a mentor and a big-hearted friend who endured a difficult childhood to become a voice against racism.
Wheels of Good Fortune.
One hundred sixty years ago, a man with a bold mustache and a bicycle with a huge wheel dreamed of pedaling around the world. Meet Thomas Stevens, the first human to circumnavigate the globe on a bike.
Winning at the Game of Life.
College football player gives up his scholarship to make more possible for a teammate.
The Calm in the Storm.
Being that one voice of encouragement in a community makes all the difference.
Steph Curry Keeps Hitting the Shots that Matter.
In his new book for children, the NBA superstar encourages kids to take courage and believe in themselves — something the once-underrated hoop star understands.
How to Honor Your Mother.
Warrick Dunn played in the NFL for 12 seasons. His most impressive stat: He’s built 200 homes for single mothers. And he’s not done.
Turning Tough News Into Hope.
How 11-year-old Jordan Phillips raised $120,000 to help fund cancer treatment.
Including Everybody Means Everybody.
How Inclusion Films is making movies using crew with developmental disabilities.
Finding Our Way.
Using the natural elements around her, Kala Baybayan Tanaka navigates the ocean in a canoe for up to three weeks using nothing but observations of the natural elements around her.
Photographs that Changed the World.
How the searing photographs of Walker Evans’ America during the Depression created a national change in attitude toward the poor.
Fix it Yourself.
How one couple moved hundreds of miles from home to run a center for pregnant teenage girls.
Going Deep to Deliver Kindness.
Free-dive record holder Enzo Maiorca rescues a trapped dolphin, then watches as it gives birth.
Arthur Brooks, the Professor of Happiness.
Being happy in this life doesn’t come easy for any of us. Harvard Professor Arthur Brooks has discovered timeless ways to find fulfillment and happiness, no matter our situation.
How to Land an Airplane Without Landing Gear.
17-year-old Maggie Taraska landed her airplane without landing gear on her way to flying solo cross-country.
Bringing the Moon to your Living Room.
How 14-year-old Philo Farnsworth tinkered his way to the technology that broadcast the moon landing.
For Soccer Superstar Cristiano Ronaldo, Every Day is Mother’s Day.
Fortune and fame have allowed the soccer great to take care of his mother after all she has done for him.
Milton Wright, Father of Famous Fliers.
The stern man who believed humans were never meant to fly was overcome with emotion when Wilbur took him on his first flight.
The Most Recognizable Voice in the World.
James Earl Jones put away the villainous Darth Vader to enjoy a character more like his real self: the kind Mr. Mertle in Sandlot.
53 Olympic Gold Medals.
How one athlete overcame a genetic disorder and a tragic accident to become a treasure worth more than gold.
Stay Curious.
The remarkable underwater life of Jacques Cousteau.
Beatrice Shilling
The motorcycle daredevil who became a mechanical engineer and saved the lives of countless pilots in WWll.
The Enduring Smile of the Mona Lisa Still Calms Us Today.
The mystery and the maternal security of the world’s most famous painting.
From the Beach to the Desert.
How a group of ambitious kids from Laguna Beach High School in California are digging wells in Kenya.
Curing Cancer, One Bar of Soap at a Time.
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Respecting Your Customers.
As the Great Depression impoverished the country, many families stretched their budgets by making clothes out of flour and seed sacks. What companies did next may surprise you.
Let the Kids Give it a Try
How 17-year-old Dasia Taylor developed sutures that detect infection.
Running to Win isn’t Always Running to Come in First.
Jacqueline Nyetipei Kiplimo demonstrates what really matters in life and in sports.
Taking Care.
How one woman turned a life of neglect into a lifetime of taking care of people.
The Secret Ingredient to a Good Meal: Family and Friends.
Bernetta McKindra pays tribute to her grandfather, the Barbecue King of Kansas City. A StoryCorps story.
The Electric Influence of a Good Mother.
Nikola Tesla was, in many ways, the stereotype of a mad scientist. His mother was kind, curious and loving. She encouraged him to look beyond his humble beginnings to the world stage.
Find the Good in Everybody.
Dolly Parton has made us feel loved and appreciated for decades. The singer/songwriter is a part of each of us who desires to be our best.
Matter In Motion.
How a physics professor is igniting the scientific passions of her female students.
A Lesson We Should Never Forget.
The incredible story of American POWs smuggling rations to Russian prisoners at Stalag-B.
Never, Ever Give Up.
The incredible story of the 12-year-old cancer patient who brings joy to half a million children fighting cancer.
The Curse of Texting and Driving.
How one father turned personal tragedy into triumph for thousands of teenagers by creating the Honor Connor Scholarship Fund.
In the Aftermath of Disaster, Rebuild.
Julie and Ron Lynam lost their dream home in a forest fire, so they got to work dreaming and building again—a StoryCorps story.
The Last American Explorer.
Norman Vaughan trekked Antarctica with Admiral Byrd, completed the Iditarod 13 times and climbed the 10,000-foot, icy mountain named after him at age 89.
Ramping Up to Help those in Need.
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Education is for Everyone.
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Everyone Needs a Good Teacher. Even Einstein.
Ernst Mach, the forgotten professor who influenced Einstein and developed a method for measuring aircraft velocity.
To All who are Lost: You will be Found Again.
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The Art of Doing Good.
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The all-time NCAA scoring leader is more than a great shooter.
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The Long Shot.
Hunter Woodhall won state in the 400 meters with a blistering time of 47.64 seconds — without legs.
Teach Your Children.
How Graham Nash is still leading children into a better future.
He Ain’t Heavy, He’s my Brother.
The tender relationship between two brothers is a beacon for us all. A StoryCorps moment that will make your day.
Go Fast, Go Long.
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From Russia, With Love.
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Our Local Heroes in Scrubs.
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Let the Music Move You.
Bob Geldof has spent a lifetime seeking harmony in the world.
Never Give Up.
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The life of best-selling author Isabelle Allende is a mission to bring relief to the suffering and a call to join the effort.