Week Seven at camp is often referred to as ‘The Wall’,
something the counsellors hit with full force. We get tired, grumpy, burnt out
and we start looking towards the end with growing anticipation. That’s easy
enough for the counselors to feel after seven weeks of camp life, but compared
to us, the Second Session campers just got here and they want and deserve the
same memorable month that First Session had when our energy was at its best.
Our lack of energy inevitably ruins the Second Session experience.
I hit ‘the wall’, a little prematurely, about a week ago.
One too many difficult camper-related situations which required intense
communicative problem solving on behalf of my co-counselor and I, left me ready
to bow out gracefully.
In an attempt to return, or at least remember, what life is
like outside of camp, Caitlin and I spent out day-off last week, walking around
the Grounds for Sculpture park in Pennsylvania. It was nice to feel cultural
again and to discuss art in a way which two adults could. Rather than asking
leading questions and prying the answers out of the campers like you pry flesh
from a stubborn oyster. After that we disappeared into the rainy-labyrinth of
Philadelphia. We got, what Caitlin refers to as ‘fancy coffee’, ie. a latte,
and read The New York Times in a cafe in Bella Vista. We went real-estate
snooping for Caitlin’s new apartment. We went to our favourite Mexican
restaurant on Morris St and we saw Crazy, Stupid Love at the cinema. After a
day of doing what normal people do with their free time, we returned to camp,
where I felt like I had finally scaled ‘The Wall’.
The two-week campers of Second Session left on Sunday,
leaving a large six-camper hole in my 14-camper bunk. Saying goodbye to them
made me feel like a parent sending her children off to college. I had taught
and counselled them as best as I knew how in the two weeks they were mine and
now I could only hope that I had somehow brought them up right. The first two
weeks had held some special memories – the rainforest-themed camp dance, the
scavenger hunt where my bunk dressed up as my co’s hairy, English camp
boyfriend and all the random, sometimes serious but most ridiculous
conversations we had before going to bed.
It’s not about counting the days, but about making them count.
Ciao for now. xo
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