By Grace Maselli
The life blood of any timebank is its exchanges. What a person offers to another member.
What a person receives. An hour for an hour. When the timing and need sync. No matter if you’re pulling weeds or pulling teeth. Could be a household chore. An errand to the dry cleaners. A visit to someone in the hospital. A meal for their family.
It’s the stuff of caring. Often with meaning way beyond money; rather, it’s about the actions and deeds that thread and join the interdependent fabric of community. Youth—teens—can be involved too. According to the chores list on “VeryWellFamily,” here’s a sampling of what youth might also contribute to their local timebank exchanges:
- Plant watering
- Pet feeding
- Pet walking (and litter box cleaning!)
- A scrubba dub dub of pets, pets’ things, and cars in driveways
- Babysitting (complete with chocolate chip cookie baking)
Orrr…
- Lawn mowing
- Hoisting and heaving plant cuttings into bags, then tossing bags into appropriate receptacles
- Light housekeeping for older people
- Reading/companionship to housebound folks
So consider getting your teens into the swing of timebank things. Because you never know when the effort can really make a positive difference in someone else’s life. And yours. Open our TBT timebanking flyer for more info.













history buffs, Philippe Park is the oldest of its kind in Pinellas County. To learn some quick, interesting facts, check out the 

