Boy, 7, uses $600 of savings to make coronavirus care packages for seniors, feed 90 students
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Amid the coronavirus pandemic, a first-grader in Gaithersburg, Md., used money he saved up to help those in need as a way to overcome fear with acts of love.
Cavanaugh Bell, 7, spent $600 of his own money, saved up from two birthdays and three Christmases, to purchase and package 65 "COVID-19 Carepacks" along with 31 hot meals from a local restaurant, Buca Di Beppo, to serve to senior citizens and help the local businesses impacted by being closed after Gov. Larry Hogan shut down restaurants Monday.
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"What's up guys! I'm at Target," Cavanaugh said in a video for his supporters. "Thank you for your donations, and look at all the stuff we got."
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He filled several shopping carts with food and a bottle of bleach to hand out to seniors. One responded, "Oh, thank you, sweetie!"
The 7-year-old added in another video, "Don't forget our senior citizens. They need to eat, too."
On top of that, he also helped feed 90 students in need on Thursday.
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Cavanaugh started a non-profit called "Cool and Dope" with the mission to "eradicate all bullying and youth suicide through political and social action by his 18th birthday on Nov. 20, 2030."
He became a philanthropist and anti-bullying activist after, at just 5 years old, he was bullied to the point of having suicidal thoughts. His mom encouraged him to counteract his experience by creating a movement to spread positivity and love.
In such a short amount of time and at a young age, he's already accomplished so much.
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He gave a TEDX Youth Talk, got the city of Gaithersburg to dedicate February 21 as Bullying Awareness Day in honor of Gabriel Taye, an 8-year-old in Ohio who committed suicide because of bullying in 2017, his county designated October as Bullying Prevention Month, and this October he hopes to lead the Anti-Bullying Rally in Washington, D.C.