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Lost

Facts

If you ever get lost, just remember to:
Stay calm
Ask an adult you trust for help (Noramlly somebody who works in a shop is a good start)
Remember your full name, address and phone number.

Or better still decide with your family (or your friends) a place to meet and a time to meet back at, before you even head out (maybe it will be at a certain shop, at an information sign, by the stairs, or a gate - depending on where you're going). If you get lost make sure to stay at this place until everyone meets back there.

If you’re lost at a big place like Rainbows End talk to a staff member – someone who works there. They’re trained to know what to do in a situation like that.

At big events like a Blue Light Fun Day or at events like sports games they usually have special places for lost kids. A staff member, security guard or police officer will know where to take you or what to do.

The best people to ask are the people who are there to help and keep you safe.  


Did you know

In the one of the longest cases of being lost a Japanese soldier in the Philippines went from 1945 to 1974 (29 years) thinking that World War 2 was still happening. When he was told that the war was over and that he had been lost for 29 years the soldier broke down and cried.

In London, England here are some of the weird things that have been lost by people (and found) by the underground train service:
a wedding dress
a lawyer's robes
an exercise machine
a sack of sultanas
a 14ft boat
a briefcase containing £10,000 ($30,000 New Zealand Dollars)
a park bench
a grandfather clock
a stuffed eagle
and... even a kitchen sink!!

In the year 2000, New Zealanders reported to the police over 51,715 things that they had lost.

In Hurricane Katrina and Rita (which happened in 2005 in America) 5,192 kids were reported lost or missing. The good news is that every single kid was found and returned home! How's that for cool!


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