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Danielle Hatherley Carroll is an artist. She shares her talent with others, taking groups on field trips around various locations in New York City, setting up easels and enjoying the company of a variety of people as she captures the beauty of the city.
Art can often be about discovery and connection. And real life can often be about loss. When Danielle returned home one night, at first she didn’t realize that somewhere along the day’s painting journey, she had lost her wedding ring.
Then, at 3:30 in the morning, she sat up in bed, panicked at the feel of her empty left ring finger. She tried not to wake her husband but was caught heading out the door. When Danielle admitted what had happened, her husband got out of bed, and the two of them went out to search dumpsters.
The last place she remembered the ring on her finger was in Battery Park, when she was washing up. By the time they got there, all the garbage cans had already been emptied. Desperate, Danielle wrote a note and put it on the windshield of a nearby garbage truck, hoping against all odds that someone might be of help. “Help,” the note read. “I believe my wedding ring might be in this truck.” It was all she could do.
Parks and Recreation employee Gary Gaddist discovered the note in the early morning. He gave Danielle a call, and she explained the whole story.
“I had to go to Randall’s Island, and when I got there I showed the guys the note,” Gary recalls. They told him, “If you want to look for a needle in a haystack, go ahead.”
Now, this is New York City, and tons of garbage is moved every day, in multiple directions. Gary only knew that somewhere in the hub, among hundreds of piled-up bags, he was looking for a clear plastic garbage bag stuffed with a day’s worth of artist’s rags. He was up to the task.
At 8:00 that morning, Gary called Danielle with the good news. She burst into tears and took a cab to meet Gary. When asked why he would take the extra time to help out a stranger, Gary simply said, “It’s a love thing. I could tell she and her husband love each other. I’m glad I could help.”
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How Inclusion Films is making movies using crew with developmental disabilities.
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Something Healthy for All of Us
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A Lesson We Should Never Forget.
The incredible story of American POWs smuggling rations to Russian prisoners at Stalag-B.
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The Electric Influence of a Good Mother.
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Don’t Let a Bad Day Trick You Into Believing You Have a Bad Life.
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On the Wings of Angels.
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The Frozen Race to Save Lives.
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Let the Music Move You.
Bob Geldof has spent a lifetime seeking harmony in the world.
Going Deep to Deliver Kindness.
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The Importance of a Good Dinner.
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Pull Up for a Stranger in Need.
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What we Learn About Ourselves from the Boys in the Boat.
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Love Rules.
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The Science of Happiness.
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When the World Says You Can’t, Listen to the Inner Voice that Says You Can.
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Playtime is for Everybody.
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Bringing the Moon to your Living Room.
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Born to Make a Difference.
Kids who are changing their world.
Everybody Gets on Base.
Measuring the victories of life, one single at a time.
How Far Can Mind and Body Take You?
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The Cellist of Sarajevo.
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Courage in a New World.
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Let the Kids Give it a Try
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From the NFL to the Opera
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Winning at the Game of Life.
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Overcoming Fear Sometimes Requires a Patient Friend.
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Everybody Can Be a Hero.
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The Art of Doing Good.
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Listening from the Heart.
Ludwig Van Beethoven wrote some of his greatest works when he couldn’t hear a note.
Never Too Small to Make a Big Difference.
Georgia “Tiny” Broadwick was the first woman to jump from an airplane using a parachute.
Running to Win isn’t Always Running to Come in First.
Jacqueline Nyetipei Kiplimo demonstrates what really matters in life and in sports.
Using the Write Words
How an African American Woman Wrote her Way to Freedom.
Listening to the Music Inside.
The long journey of Maria Tallchief from the Osage Nation in Oklahoma to prima ballerina in New York City.
Harmony in Hardship.
Glenn Miller dropped out of college to become the swingingest band leader in the world.
Lift Your Voice, Use Your Mind, Lift Others.
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Understanding Our Universe.
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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.
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