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Become 10 Again! (It Builds Your Brain)

Reader's Digest US

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October 2019

Want to find the key to happiness? Think about what excited you most when you were in fifth grade—and do it now.

- Bruce Grierson

Become 10 Again! (It Builds Your Brain)

Everyone who works at NASA or Google or SpaceX got excited about science before he or she was 10 years old,” TV host Bill “The Science Guy” Nye said recently. “This is well documented. If it isn’t 10, it’s 11 or 12. But it ain’t 17, I’ll tell you that much.”

You can plainly see the 10-year-old inside Nye, who is now 63, just as you can see the 10-year-old in anyone else who works at the junction where their deep happiness meets the world’s deep needs.

Walter Murch, the Oscar-winning film editor who likewise discovered his passion in childhood, followed a twistier—and perhaps more typical— career path than the lifelong science geeks. You can’t do kid stuff for a living, he was told—“kid stuff” in this case meaning fooling around with a friend’s dad’s tape recorder, sampling snippets of sound. He was steered toward more practical pursuits, such as engineering and oceanography. Forty-odd years later,

Murch landed in the movie business. And one day it dawned on him why this new job, film editing, felt so right: It scratched the same itch that splicing audio had all those years ago in his pal’s basement. “I was doing almost exactly what excited me most when I was 10,” he said.

Murch wondered whether he’d stumbled on a general rule: What if what we really loved doing between ages 9 and 11 is what most of us ought to be doing, somehow, for our actual job as adults? If that’s true, he thought, then our life satisfaction depends rather heavily on recalling precisely what that thing was—on remembering who we were during that unique developmental stage, where everything that’s in us shows itself for the first time.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Reader's Digest US

Reader's Digest US

Reader's Digest US

Drawn to Help

A watercolor artist made a remarkable offer to people who lost their homes to the Los Angeles fires: \"I will paint it for free\"

time to read

2 mins

December 2025 / January 2026

Reader's Digest US

No Drama Llamas

BEING WITH LOVED ones during the holidays is a delight. Getting there is not.

time to read

1 min

December 2025 / January 2026

Reader's Digest US

It's in the Bag

WE HAVE A fun family tradition for Christmas Eve. Well, we have a few, but everyone's favorite is the grab bag. After a chili supper and evening church, we all gather at my parents' house and dive in.

time to read

1 mins

December 2025 / January 2026

Reader's Digest US

Reader's Digest US

Norman the Camel

WE ADDED NORMAN to the menagerie—Clydesdales, cows, emus, peacocks and more—on our 50-acre farm five years ago.

time to read

1 min

December 2025 / January 2026

Reader's Digest US

The Story Behind Our Stories

I’m so grateful to Derek Burnett for explaining how Reader’s Digest edits and fact-checks its stories (August/September). It’s frightening that much of the information online comes from underqualified and often unpaid sources. But it feels good to read the magazine with confidence, knowing your focus is to maintain our trust in you. You have done so. —GEORGIA KAY MCCARTNEY Urbana, IL

time to read

3 mins

December 2025 / January 2026

Reader's Digest US

Reader's Digest US

Our Best Worst Christmas Idea Ever ...

... had four legs and a wagging tail—a puppy!

time to read

4 mins

December 2025 / January 2026

Reader's Digest US

Kindred Spirits

RECORD HIGH 49% of drinking-age Americans tried to cut out or cut back on alcohol this year. As more of us stay \"dry\" well past January, more bars and restaurants are offering alcohol-free cocktails (also called mocktails).

time to read

1 min

December 2025 / January 2026

Reader's Digest US

Reader's Digest US

Greetings from PERU AMATEUR CIRCUS

THE CLOWNERY STARTS on the sidewalk, even before you enter the big top. Crowds who show up to see the Peru Amateur Circus in Peru, Indiana, known as America's circus city, are greeted by merrymakers with silly jokes and swirly rainbow suckers. The smell of buttery popcorn fills the air; roaring trumpets fill the ears. Flossy cotton candy melts on the tongue. The circus is about to begin!

time to read

3 mins

October / November 2025

Reader's Digest US

Reader's Digest US

LIFE

IN THESE United States

time to read

1 mins

October / November 2025

Reader's Digest US

The GREAT ALASKA TURKEY BOMB

A woman takes to the skies to make sure people in remote areas aren't forgotten for the holidays

time to read

5 mins

October / November 2025

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