There were some young kids playing at the park today. One of them said “Liar liar pants on fire!” The other one replied “I don’t even care about that. I don’t even believe in that.”
Summer Camp, 1996
Green Bay Girl Scouts and counselors on woodland trail at Lost Lake Organization Camp, Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest
Wisconsin
1952.
So you’re spending the Summer at Camp, and your Camp uses “camp names”… Whether you’re a new CIT or a counselor, using a camp name can be hard to adjust to (even if you’ve been waiting for this moment for years)!
You need to learn to respond to a new name, write it on papers, and introduce yourself as such. The secret to (quickly) learning to identify with and respond to a new camp name?
Yep, it’s weird! And yes, it’s awkward! But it truly works like a charm. Narrate what you’re doing, answer questions in the 3rd person- use your name in 3rd person references liberally and then some.
“Sunshine is feeling great about high ropes!”
“Casper is going to go to clean up in here and then Casper will head to lunch.”
“Snappy is headed to the lodge!”
Help your new coworkers to get comfortable with their names: use their camp names liberally as well! Even if they are a returning staff member, using their name can help them get back into their camp persona (more on this later).
“Rhythm is good! How is Acorn today?”
“Meadow is going to the lake with Sketch, does Atlas want to join?”
“Has Comet seen Ponyo yet?”
This helps everyone to get into the flow of camp, and can speed up the adjustment process- don’t let camp culture shock get the best of you, embrace the weird new culture around you! But of course, speak up when you feel the new (or return!) counselor scaries set in. Whether it’s your first summer or seventh, the start of summer anxiety can get to you- talk to your fellow counselors and admin staff, and know you will do amazing things this Summer!
Campers enjoy some water activities at Camp Eagle Island summer camp.
Saranac Lake, New York
1960
“The whole point of Camp is to dethrone the serious. Camp is playful, anti-serious. More precisely, Camp involves a new, more complex relation to “the serious.” One can be serious about the frivolous, frivolous about the serious”
— Susan Sontag, Notes on Camp
the audible gasp I let out upon reading the update- this is so terribly “Girl Scout camp core” that it’s not even funny lol
I also don’t think our HR lady is real, evidence: I have never once met her and she definitely has not stepped in when very clearly needed in the past… if she was long-ago fired, but we didn’t know, I wouldn’t be too shocked actually
"my camp conspiracy theory is that [our hr person] doesn't exist" "oh i actually met her last year! it was weird" "see i don't think you met her, i think you met an actress who was pretending to be her. i think [our hr person] is just a shared email account that everyone at council sometimes checks"
(conversation that was had with the lovely @girl-scout-camp)
To all the girls I met at camp and never saw again ❤️ perhaps we'll meet again in another life
So you’re spending the Summer at Camp, and your Camp uses “camp names”… Whether you’re a new CIT or a counselor, using a camp name can be hard to adjust to (even if you’ve been waiting for this moment for years)!
You need to learn to respond to a new name, write it on papers, and introduce yourself as such. The secret to (quickly) learning to identify with and respond to a new camp name?
Yep, it’s weird! And yes, it’s awkward! But it truly works like a charm. Narrate what you’re doing, answer questions in the 3rd person- use your name in 3rd person references liberally and then some.
“Sunshine is feeling great about high ropes!”
“Casper is going to go to clean up in here and then Casper will head to lunch.”
“Snappy is headed to the lodge!”
Help your new coworkers to get comfortable with their names: use their camp names liberally as well! Even if they are a returning staff member, using their name can help them get back into their camp persona (more on this later).
“Rhythm is good! How is Acorn today?”
“Meadow is going to the lake with Sketch, does Atlas want to join?”
“Has Comet seen Ponyo yet?”
This helps everyone to get into the flow of camp, and can speed up the adjustment process- don’t let camp culture shock get the best of you, embrace the weird new culture around you! But of course, speak up when you feel the new (or return!) counselor scaries set in. Whether it’s your first summer or seventh, the start of summer anxiety can get to you- talk to your fellow counselors and admin staff, and know you will do amazing things this Summer!
Working at a Summer Camp:
Working at a Summer Camp is not for the weak, nobody will tell you that it is easy- but everybody will tell you that it is oh so worth it.
Working at a Summer Camp is worth the long days and .
Working at a Summer Camp is worth the tipped canoes, and impossible swim caps.
Working at a Summer Camp is worth the soggy sandals, and muddy socks.
Working at a Summer Camp is worth the long hikes and dry, hot sun.
Working at a Summer Camp is worth the spiders, the too-close-for-comfort raccoon sightings, the mosquito bites that seem to never disappear.
Working at a Summer Camp is worth the late nights sat up with homesick campers, and the long, sometimes difficult conversations you have with older campers.
Working at a Summer Camp is worth every minor inconvenience, every sunburn, every rough day, because you make a positive impact on a young kid. This Summer, your time at Camp will be more important than ever- be the person a kid can to look to for hope, be the person that shows a kid they can be unapologetically themself, be the person who takes away their worries (even if it’s just for a week).
When you realize the impact you can have, everything becomes worth it. It will never be a walk in the park- if it were, everyone would do it! But it will always be worth it.
Girl Scout camp counselorsomewhere in the woods, probably in a canoe
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