Oakville Beaver, p. 28

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in si de ha lto n. co m O ak vi lle B ea ve r | T hu rs da y, A ug us t 26 ,2 02 1 | 28 www.shoppersdrugmart.ca 2501 Third Line905-465-3000 478 Dundas Street West905-257-9737NOW OPEN24 HRS EVERY DAY • Patient Counselling • Complete Diabetic Care• Home Visits • Consultations • Free RX Delivery• Free Nutrition Counselling • Vaccinations• Cholesterol, A1C, AFib and DNA Screening lw ys Here toelp You! DE RANGO PHARMACY INC. w 2501 T905-465-3000 • P• H • C AlwaHelp Pharmacist -Fabio De Rango Drug Store/Pharmacy Interlocking & Concrete Specialists Call Mario 905.842.7171 sunmarlandscape.com ™ La n d s c a p in g 3133 Burnhamthorpe Rd W, Milton, On L9E 0J7 • Pebble Concrete • Stamped Concrete • Interlocking • Flagstone • Walkways • Garage Floors • Patios • Driveways • Curbs (French) Interlocking & Concrete Specialists Communities we serve: Located in Halton region, we work in and around • Milton • Campbellville • Burlington • Aldershot • Hamilton • Oakville • Mississauga • Waterdown • Carlisle Cut out paying more Your only destination for more coupons, more flyers, more savings. #SavingWithSave Save $1.00 on any Nature's Bounty product save.ca/coupons Scan to get coupons While most children in mid-August are getting ready to go back to school, five-year-old Journee Campbell is helping them prepare in more ways than one. The Oakville youngster is the author of two books: "The Little Voice in my Head" and her latest work "Save Your Tears Have no Fear." "I'm going to help them learn their ABCs," said Journee. "My school broke down because of the (CO- VID) virus, I still wanted to help them learn." The idea came to Jour- nee's parents, Jasquand and Abigail Campbell, sometime last year. The family goes back and forth between Oakville and Rochester New York, where Jasquand is from. The family was stuck south of the border when the pandemic landed in Canada. Journee's school also closed as a result, forc- ing her parents to take a more active role in her learning. The materials provided by the school, they felt, were less than ad- equate. "We were receiving packages of information from school. We noticed that Journee just wasn't in- terested in the informa- tion," Jasquand said. Journee began doing her own drawings, which her father then turned into a book of flash cards to aid in her learning. She started telling her teachers in Rochester "I have a book." This got them curious. "When we went to pick her up one day, [her teachers] were asking, what is this book?," said Abigail. "And we were like, she wrote a book. The ball started rolling from there to turn it into a proper chil- dren's book. "The Little Voice in my Head" was released last spring and it seeks to teach children positive self-affir- mations. Each letter of the alphabet has its own posi- tive note for readers to say to themselves. "I am awe- some" for the letter A. "I am thankful" for T. The letter M gets "I am motivated." The book is already in the classrooms of her school in Rochester, the Je- sus Loves Us Child Care Centre. "We included the book in our classrooms ob- viously as a way to support her career and her family, but also to support the so- cial-emotional growth of our students," the centre's Dawn Brugger told the Oakville Beaver via email. "We are big proponents of mental wellness and in- tentionally teach social emotional skills daily in each of our classrooms; skills like identifying emo- tions, resolving conflicts and self-regulation strate- gies," Brugger added. The popularity of the books skyrocketed very quickly. No less a figure than Tatyana Ali, known for playing cousin Ashley on TV's "Fresh Prince of Bel-Air," promoted "The Little Voice in my Head." The book is available at Barnes and Noble in the United States. The family says they are in talks with Chapters-In- digo to include the book in their stock. They are also working with Halton Dis- trict School Board and Wil- lowbrae Childcare Acade- my to include it in their classrooms, too. But Journee isn't done yet. "Save Your Tears, Have no Fears," preorders for which are now being taken, is a collection of vignettes showing Journee, a char- acter in both books, facing her fears. These include a harrowing encounter with a garden snake and the scary basement of her home. In both situations, she repeated her mantra that she came up with, "save your tears, have no fear." NEWS 'I'M GOING TO HELP THEM LEARN THEIR ABCS' LOCAL GIRL PENS TWO CHILDREN'S BOOKS Journee Campbell (joined by her parents Jasquand and Abigail) holds her book "The Little Voice in my Head." Mansoor Tanweer photo MANSOOR TANWEER mtanweer@metroland.com

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