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Pizza, Lost Treasure & Your Kids

By Kevin Outland on Mon, Jul 21st 08 at 12:17AM | Permalink | Comments (2)

Every Friday is pizza and a movie night at our house. It’s a great opportunity to get the family together and just hang out. The last movie we watched together was National Treasure 2. nt2It’s a great story about a family motivated to find the legendary Native American city of gold, Cibola. Not for wealth and fame but to clear their family’s good name. I had a treasure I had recently lost so I watched the movie with heightened interest. My family’s good name wasn’t at stake but having to call several credit card companies and taking a trip to the Secretary of State to get a new license was. Yes, I lost my wallet. I had looked all over the house for it. I’d also gone back to my office and searched there and looked through my car but no dice. I’m sure many of you can relate to that sick feeling you get in your stomach when you’ve lost something that’s important to you. Well the movie got me thinking. The cast of characters in National Treasure 2 were highly motivated to find the lost city of gold. So when the movie ended I told my kids I had a treasure for them to find and the reward was 5 bucks. The $5 was ample motivation as the kids ran off to search for the lost treasure, my wallet. It wasn’t long until they realized they needed some more clues to aid in their search. My youngest daughter actually conducted a rather thorough interview of me, asking me when I’d last used my wallet, where had I looked for it and so forth. Satisfied she had sufficient clues she narrowed her search. As I was digging for treasure in our laundry basket I heard these wonderful words ring out “Daddy I found your wallet!”.  It was my youngest daughter and she was beaming from ear to ear. The relief I felt in that moment was enormous. Lost treasure found! I was more than happy to pay her the $5 reward.

So what’s the point of this lost treasure story? Your kids have a valuable treasure, their innocence, and people are trying to steal it everyday. What is sad is that many parents don’t realize that treasure thieves are waiting for their kids on the Internet. Kids surfing the web are a misspelled word or an unwise mouse click away for loosing part of their innocence. And no treasure hunter can get this lost treasure back. It’s gone forever. That thought should give you that sick feeling in your stomach. So many of the parents I’ve talk with over the years have come to me after the innocence has been lost, asking me what can they do to protect their kids now. Their motivation to do something to protect their family came too late. My hope is to try to motivate parents to take action before the treasure thieves find their kids. So if you’re a parent and have not taken a least some basic steps to protect your family from Internet dangers don’t wait another day. Here are the basics:

#1: Get an Internet Filter (www.safeeyes.com).

#2: Put your computer in a high traffic area of your home (like your kitchen).

#3: Make sure your kids know not to give out their personal information online (name, address, phone number) without your permission.

By the way, after finding my wallet and collecting the $5 reward my daughter put this sign on her bedroom door: Wallet Finding Business – Open. It’s amazing what a little motivation can do.

 


Keith wrote on August 10th 08 at 09:00AM
Great advice for parents!! And by the way, your commentary is about National Treasure, the first film, not the sequel like you have posted with the pic. :) God bless.

Keith
Kevin Outland wrote on August 14th 08 at 05:31PM
@ Keith:

My commentary was about the second film. Follow this link and you'll see: www.imdb.com/title/tt0465234/plotsummary

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