English, asked by geetugeethika3837, 1 year ago

a personal experience on the day i was lost in fair

Answers

Answered by Anushkasingh456
0

Answer:

I went to the State Fair with my parents and two older sisters. On the way there, my dad made clear to us the plan: should any of us get lost, we were to find our way to the yellow slide, where we would meet up.

Sure enough, late in the day I became mesmerized by the prizes in one of the booths. I went up close to look, and when I turned around, I couldn’t see my family anywhere. I wandered around looking for them, but in the sea of people, I couldn’t find them. Eventually some lady came up to me and asked me if I was lost. Desperately shy, I nodded my head, and she held my hand and took me to a police officer.

I knew I was supposed to tell them that I needed to go to the yellow slide, but unfortunately my overwhelming shyness prevented me from speaking up. Instead, I was put in the back of the police officer’s squad car and taken to the Lost Persons building. I remember being in the back of that car as it drove very slowly through a crowd of people. A woman in the crowd pointed at me and said “Look, a lost child!”

When I got to the Lost Persons building, I must have given them my name and information, although I don’t remember doing so. Still, I didn’t mention that I was supposed to go to the yellow slide. My father’s plan to find each other didn’t take into account his five-year-old’s fear of talking.

I waited for what seemed like hours in a sterile looking room. There were other children there too – more lost sheep waiting to be rescued. Eventually, after going to the yellow slide and not finding me there, my parents heard about the missing persons building and came and got me. “Why didn’t you go to the yellow slide?” they asked. I didn’t have an answer. The next year, when I went to the fair with my little sister and my dad, we had to wear balloons on our wrists.

A lot has changed since then. Brienna Schuette, Communications Director for the State Fair, said that cell phones have greatly reduced the number of children getting lost. In 2008, there were only 99 missing persons, compared to 128 in 2007 and 144 in 2006. The first year they started documenting the number of missing persons was 1999, when 400 missing persons were reported.

Schuette said that parents with children can get an ID bracelet at any information booth at the fair. Parents can write their contact information and cell phone on the bracelet, which the child or other person wears.

Schuette also recommends that parents with older children have a meeting place should anyone get lost. That plan obviously didn’t work in my case, but can be a good way to keep track of older children. If that doesn’t work, well, there are always leashes.

Answered by studingmind
2

Answer:

I went to navratri mela with my parents and my littel sister. We were enjoying it very much when suddenly I fell from platform and injured my leg. It was too much pain I was felling. But I was able to walk slowly . My mother decided to return home, but my father was very tired that he could not walk he decided to sit there for a while and I also agreed him and sat near him. My mother gone to exit gate with my sister afer a few seconds only I said to my father and went to my mother who was not that much far but as I was not able to walk properly I cant reached her and also she was not able to litsen me in that crowdy place. I then decided to return to my father but when I reach at place where my father was sitting he had already gone from there I tried to find my parents but I could not. I was very sad at that time and decided to go to fair security office and tell them about my parents so that they could let me meet my family. When I reached there I found my parents were already there to ask officers to do serch of me.Tear rolled down my eyes and I hugged my mother thigthly from that day I never left my parents company in such crowdy place

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