<div> Setting out to visit a loved one, a child curiously asks a fellow commuter, "Who are you going to visit?" In answer to this simple question, the child learns about the love and loss in the life of a stranger: a father who lives apart from his small daughter, a husband who has lost his wife, a granddaughter who is forgotten by her grandfather, and a mother who fears for her son?s recovery. After each conversation, the child understands that the other commuters have someone in their lives that they love "as much as I love you," and it is this understanding that allows the child to explore the most universal of human experiences: the power of love in the many different forms that it can take. <i>Visiting You</i> also explores a sense of community. Under her mother?s supervision, a young child reaches out and connects with the people around them; they?re not scared of strangers, or people who might ?look? scary, or people who are different to them. Sometimes it can take conscious decision and determination to look past outward appearances. <i>Visiting You</i> encourages us to find the similarities between people instead of focusing on differences, to recognize some part of ourselves in the life of a stranger. </div>