Cerebral Palsy
Awareness Initiative
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Why we started

It began with a few afternoons — and the children who changed everything.

Over several months, we spent time alongside children with cerebral palsy in therapy and adaptive sports. We came to help. We left determined to do more.

Our cause

We watched children work harder at a single hand movement than most of us work at anything — and do it with a smile.

What started as volunteering became something we couldn't walk away from. We sat beside kids learning to balance, to draw a straight line, to catch a ball, to be understood. We saw how much therapy, equipment, and encouragement matter — and how often money is the only thing standing between a child and the care they need.

So we built this. Not as a personal project, but as a movement — to raise awareness, to raise funds, and to make sure every dollar reaches a child who deserves the chance to move, play, and thrive.

Three children we met

Their stories, kept anonymous

Out of respect for their privacy, names and details are changed. The courage is entirely real.

Ataxic CP · Adaptive tennis

Learning to find balance

She moves with a walker, and ataxic CP makes balance and coordination a daily challenge. On the court, we started simple — just tapping a balloon back and forth. Then a forehand. Then a backhand with a real ball.

Little by little she found the rhythm, held a short conversation between swings, and kept trying. Every rally was a small victory in coordination — and in confidence.

Ataxic CP · OT & PT · Many months

Stronger, week by week

We spent the most time with him — session after session of occupational and physical therapy. Stretching tight muscles, stacking blocks, drawing lines, pinching small objects, pedaling, zipping, placing colors in their spots. Each exercise builds toward something bigger: picking up a water bottle, wiping his own mouth, living more independently.

He's left-handed, so his therapist strengthens both arms. Music motivates him; applause makes him light up. And when words are hard, he uses an eye-gaze device — answering questions and finishing puzzles by looking at the right response.

Over the months, his cognition, focus, and hands all grew. He responds faster, tries harder, and doesn't give up. The change is real — and it comes from showing up, every single week.

CP · Vision impairment · Adaptive baseball

Playing through it

On the baseball field, he's on the stronger end — walking, catching, throwing, and hitting, all while managing a vision impairment that makes the ball hard to track. He plays anyway, and he plays well.

Watching him taught us how far encouragement carries. For every child out there — whatever their type or severity — support and belief change what's possible.

From the field

A few things we learned

“Every child with CP is different — even with the same diagnosis.”
Type and severity vary widely. Some kids look like they have no CP at all; others need a walker, wheelchair, or device.
“Loose, moving muscles matter enormously.”
Many kids have stiff muscle tone. Consistent stretching and movement keep joints mobile and bodies strong.
“Encouragement is the most powerful tool in the room.”
A clap, a cheer, a favorite song — kids respond to support with motivation, focus, and pure joy.
A note from the founder

“I came to these sessions to help, but I'm the one who was changed. This isn't about me — it's about kids who deserve every chance to thrive. I hope you'll help us give it to them.”

A
A., Founder
High school student · Frisco, Texas

Believe in them too.

We've seen these kids laugh, push through, and defy expectations. Now we're asking you to help make that belief count.

Cerebral Palsy Awareness Initiative

Raising awareness and funds for children living with cerebral palsy. Every dollar funds therapy, equipment, and opportunity.

Frisco, Texas · In partnership with CPRN
An independent, student-led awareness initiative. Donations are directed through the Cerebral Palsy Research Network, a registered nonprofit. This page is not medical advice.