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Let
every kid you see today know you think they're special.
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Get
on a mailing list of an organization dedicated to improving kids
issues. Contribute, get involved, educate yourself about the issues.
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Say
hello to kids in your neighborhood. Let them know you're interested
in how they're doing.
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Go
to the library and pick up a book on the issues facing kids today
or how to be a better parent. Some classics include: Within Our
Reach by Lisbeth Schorr, As the Bough Breaks by Sylvia Hewlett,
and Wasting America's Future and The Measure of Our Success by Marian
Wright Edelman.
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Spend
time with your kids or other kids in your life. When you're with
them, practice really listening. Watch their faces light up!
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Acknowledge
someone who works with kids on a regular basis. Thank them for doing
what is sometimes a "thankless" job.
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Remember
teens are children, too. Don't expect them to act like adults just
because they are beginning to look like them. Be gentle with them,
and you'll get a more positive response.
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Arrange
one-to-one time with a favorite child. It doesn't have to be your
own! Research says kids need several adults who are crazy about
them. Being with young people keeps you young.
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Buy
a self-help book for a teen in your life. Bringing Up Parents: The
Teenager's Handbook and Fighting Invisible Tigers: A Stress Management
Guide for Teens are available through Minneapolis publisher, Free
Spirit Publishing. Call 338-2068 from the metro area or 1-800-735-7323.
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Greet
teens you pass on the sidewalk. Let them know you're proud, not
afraid to be an "elder" in this society.
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Coach
a local sports team.
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Be
a mentor either informally to a child in your neighborhood or through
a connecting agency such as One-to-One, Kinship, Big Brothers/Big
Sisters, etc.
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Work
with your school to set up a car pool to make sure transportation
is available to parents who otherwise couldn't make it to school
activities.
- Volunteer
as a tutor at a school - share your own talents and see new ones develop
in youngsters who'll get immeasurable self esteem for being recognized
as "good at something."