Nick Wood is 13 years old. In his life, there is no dad, no older brother; he lives with his single mom.
Phil Henderson is his mentor. in the Big Brothers, Big Sisters program.
“It’s just like a privilege just to have fun with a big brother and go out and stuff,” says Nick.
“It beats being home by yourself all the time, being bored, instead of just watching TV and stuff. “
Once a week, they play games. go to movies or sporting events. the boy and the man have a lot in common.
“I’m from the inner city, you know, single parent, five sisters, only boy,” explains Phil.
“So I want to make sure that another kid, if I have the time, won’t have to go through the same type of things that I went through without having that positive role model or mentor around.”
Advocates say more than a million kids who really need a mentor don’t have one.
Why?
Janice McKenzie-Crayton, President, Big Brother Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta says sometimes, “Volunteers will see themselves as needing to be perfect. Or to be all-knowing, or to have this total heavy burden of now being responsible for a child. And what we say is, form the friendship.”
And that friendship changes lives. Several studies over the past decade show mentored kids do better in school, and are much less likely to get involved in drugs or crime.
As McKenzie-Crayton explains, “Mentoring works. Children who have mentors just do better. We say little moments, big magic.”
And, the mentors feel that magic, as well.
Just ask Phil, who spends several days each month with Nick. “Being that he’s a kid, he kind of pulls the kid out of me. You know, I plan on it going forever, until he’s grown and we can probably work together or something. I definitely plan on this relationship continuing throughout this program, throughout our life.
Right now, Big Brothers Big Sisters has more than 200-thousand mentors nationwide. The organization hopes to increase that number to one million, by 2010. |