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By Tish Davidson
My son, Jacob, went
to sleep away camp last summer. He had just finished fifth grade. He
thought that he was ready to go, and that he wouldn't be homesick. I
was the one who wasn't prepared for him to be away. I didn't realize
how much I would worry about him and how much I would miss him. Even though we had
talked to the camp director, and the camp was only two hours from our
home, I found I was uncomfortable turning over full-time care of Jacob
to people I didn't really know. I worried about whether he would like
the food. I wondered who would make sure he had clean clothes and that
he took a shower every day. What if the other boys in his bunk teased
him? What if he just didn't like camp? I told him that if he was
unhappy he could call us and that we would come and get him and that I
would call him to see how he was doing, but it turned out that the
camp only allowed phone calls for emergencies. I cried when we
left Jacob at camp. And at home, the house seemed so quiet. Since we
couldn't call, I wrote to him every day. The first letter we got from
him sounded miserable, and I thought about going to get him and bring
him home, but the next letter sounded like he was really having fun. I thought that I
would enjoy having Jacob gone, but I was glad when camp was over to
have him come home again. He had such a good time that he wants to go
again next year.
Letting Go
"Parents
suffer from empty nest syndrome the first time their child goes to
camp, and in my experience their suffering is in correlation to the
age of their child. The younger the child, the more difficult it is
for the parent," says Jeffrey Solomon, Executive Director of the
National Camp Association, a camp advisory service. Parents of a young
child worry more that their child may not be properly cared for, while
parents of a teen usually feel more confident that their child will
speak out if there is a problem. "All parents
experience a common feeling that something is missing when their child
goes away to camp. There is a yearning and an awareness of the
distance between themselves and their child," says Bruce Muchnick,
EdD, founder of Summer Camp Resources in Glenside, Pennsylvania.
Summer Camp Resources helps camps train the staff and prepare for
special situations that may arise during the summer. It also provides
counseling to parents of prospective campers. Realizing before the
fact that you are going to miss your child, and that your child will
miss you and probably experience some homesickness, helps parents make
it through that first awkward week. "Most parents
are anxiously awaiting that first letter home," says Solomon.
"Sometimes that first letter isn't too happy. But parents should
resist the urge to race off to camp to bring him home. If you do, it
is a message to your child that he has failed." It generally
takes five days to a week for children to make friends and settle into
the routine of camp. This is one reason why many camps recommend a
minimum of a two-week stay. Some eight week camp programs embargo
telephone calls for the first two weeks. That way the child has time
to adjust before hearing mom and dad's voice. Many parents prefer
to send their children to camps close to home, thinking that the
shorter distance will ease their homesickness and help them adjust
better. "In my more than 20 years of experience, the concern with
distance is an issue for the parents, not the child," says
Muchnick. Parents have the perception that if the child is farther
away, he will be more anxious. In reality, it is the parents desire to
have their kid close. A child comes into the camp setting and begins
to develop a support network around himself, and the distance from
home simply doesn't matter. Another issue that
bothers some parents is that they simply can't pick up the telephone
and talk to their child whenever they want to get the reassurance they
need that their child is okay. Most camps limit phone calls for a good
reason - they interrupt the adjustment the child is making to camp and
stimulate homesickness. Writing to your child as often as possible,
however, is highly recommended. "Know what the line of
communication will be so that both you and your child have realistic
expectations," says Solomon. Summer camp is a
good way to practice separations between you and your child,
separations that will eventually culminate in your child leaving home
for good as an adult. A positive experience at summer camp gives a
child confidence that he can cope without leaning on his parents. It
also gives parents a break from daily parental responsibilities and a
chance to recharge their batteries. Recognizing that separation will
be temporarily difficult for both parent and child goes a long way in
assuring that the summer camp experience will be a good one for both
generations.
How to Help
You and Your Child Have a Good Camp Experience
Tish
Davidson is a freelance writer and the mother of several campers. To
reprint this article, contact Tish directly at davison@att.net.
This article is brought to you courtesy of the author and was
originally published on www.sumercamp.org.
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