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Mother writes letter to teenager who helped her daughter learn to skateboard

'My daughter has been wanting to skateboard for months'

Roisin O'Connor
Thursday 22 October 2015 12:01 BST
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(Jeanean Thomas/Twitter)

A mother has written a touching note to the teenager who taught her daughter how to use her skateboard.

Jeanean Thomas, from Cambridge, Ontario, says her 6-year-old daughter Peyton was nervous about going to the local skate park, but one boy was there to lend her a helping hand, despite some teasing from his friends.

Ms Thomas posted the letter to the teenager on her Twitter and Facebook accounts earlier this month, and has since seen the Twitter post shared over 12,000 times.

"Dear teenage boy at skate park," the letter reads, "You’re probably about fifteen years old, so I don’t expect you to be very mature or for you to want a little girl on your skate ramp for that matter.

"What you don’t know is that my daughter has been wanting to skateboard for months. I actually had to convince her that skateboarding wasn’t just for boys. So when we walked up to the skate park and saw that it was full of teenage boys who were smoking and swearing she immediately wanted to turn around and go home."

Ms Thomas wrotes that her daughter skated down the ramp despite the boy and his friends "flying past her". After a few tries the boy approached her daughter and pointed out that she was positioning her feet wrong, and asked if she wanted help.

(Jeanean Thomas/Twitter)

"You proceeded to spend almost an hour with my daughter showing her how to balance and steer, and she listened to you; A feat not attained by most adults," Ms Thomas said. "You held her hand and helped her get up when she fell down and I even heard you tell her to stay away from the rails so that she wouldn’t get hurt.

"I want you to know that I am proud that you are part of my community, and I want to thank you for being kind to my daughter, even though your friends made fun of you for it. She left with a sense of pride and with the confidence that she can do anything, because of you.”

Ms Thomas told CBC News that the experience has made her rethink her views about teenagers as being "troublesome".

"Think about that group of teens on the corner… and remember that they’re probably good kids," she said.

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