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Introduction: Have a discussion with students about the worst thing they have ever had happen to them- a death in their family, a parents divorce etc. Read the following poem.
Group Home Before Miss Edna's House
The monsters that come at night don't breathe fire, have two heads or long claws.
The monsters that come at night don't come bloody and half-dead and calling your name.
They come looking like regular boys going through your drawers and pockets saying
You better not tell Counselor else I'll beat you down. The monsters that come at night snatch
the covers off your bed, take your pillow and in the morning
steal your bacon when the cook's back is turned call themselves The Throwaway Boys, say
You one of us now. When the relatives stop coming
When you don't know where your sister is anymore When every sign around you says
Group Home Rules: Don't do this and don't do that
until it sinks in one rainy Saturday afternoon while you're sitting at the Group Home window
reading a beat-up Group Home book, wearing a Group Home hand-me-down shirt
hearing all the Goup Home loudness, that you are a Throwaway Boy.
And the news just sits in your stomach hard and heavy as Group Home food.
Extension: Discuss the poem and ask the students how it makes them feel. Have the students write letters to "the throwaway boy" in the poem to help cheer him up and make him feel wanted.
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