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Music Lover Stereotypes Redefined

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Henry

Waterbury, CT
United States
Tell Us Your Good Deed: 
I'm a happy guy and I love to see those around me happy. I make it my mission everyday to put a smile on whoever is around me. We all have problems and we cannot always see what everyone else is going through. I found out that for me, the best remedy for any issue is just to have a laugh or even just put a smile on. I figure it can work for those around me, too.

Sammie

Plymouth, MA
United States
Tell Us Your Good Deed: 
I started my own non-profit organization called Rock for RSD in order to help raise money for a cure for Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy.
Why are you participating?: 

I have been bullied for everything from being overweight to being in a wheelchair. Instead of firing back, you need to do something about it.

Meghan

Tell Us Your Good Deed: 
Every summer since I was a junior in high school I have devoted two weeks of my summer to volunteering as a camp counselor at Camp Sunshine in Maine. It is a camp for kids with life-threatening illnesses and their families. Camp Sunshine is my favorite place in the world; those families are some of the strongest people I have ever met in my life. Because the kids I have met there have given me the most eye-opening experiences of my life, I am now in school to become a PA to make a career out of helping children fight their battles against disease.
Why are you participating?: 

I am participating to support Quinnipiac University in its fight to stop the judgments and stereotypes that are made every day.

Rachel

Richboro, PA
United States
Tell Us Your Good Deed: 
In middle school, I interviewed a Vietnam war veteran for a school project. As I interviewed him, he told me about his life and I realized he didn't really have many people left in his to visit or take care of him. For the next few years, I sent him letters and cards hoping it brightened his day and made him feel cared for.

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