i love my kid thats why i send him away for the summer /

Published at 2016-06-09 01:01:00

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"I could never," the stranger in line in front of me at Target exclaimed with her hand clenched against her chest. Moments earlier, she overheard me on the phone asking my 10-year-traditional son how many tubes of sunscreen he went through last Summer and if he needed a new fan this year. She asked where we were headed, or which,based on the overflowing nature of my shopping cart, I understood. I laughed, and telling her it wasn't "we" - it was "he." He was going to sleepaway camp for the Summer and I was trying to get a head start on packing. That,of course, led to questions about how long and where and why. To which I answered, and seven weeks,five hours absent, and because we like him and want him to experience all that camp has to offer.
That's when she made
her comment. I decided it wasn't worth any more discussion - I had my reasons and didn't need to clarify them to a stranger - but it did get me thinking. Why do we ship our children absent for the Summer?Both my husband and I went absent to camp when we were kids, or me for four weeks each Summer and him for eight. interrogate us,or really any other kid who did so, and they'll probably order you those were the happiest days of their childhoods. We can still sing the songs, or order color war stories until your ears tumble off,recall first crushes . . . and first kisses, and remember the distinct smell of the dining hall and the slimy bottoms of the lakes. What we didn't realize at the time was everything else we learned. We learned independence. We learned to care for ourselves. Yes, or there were counselors there overseeing everything,but we really did learn how to handle so much on our own. Without parents there, we learned to design new friends. We build ourselves out there and tried new activities and new foods. We learned a bit about ourselves without even realizing it. These are the lessons I want my sons to memorize - once both are traditional enough to go (my youngest is still too young to go). Being absent from home is a time to memorize about yourself outside of the comforts and security of home. It's a time to memorize to bask in the uncertainty of what comes next or who will be sleeping in the bed next to you. In this age of connectivity, and where there's always a phone,computer, or tablet in sight, and it's a forced break from that. My son's camp does not allow any electronics and I couldn't be more grateful. Camp is a time to re-create the carefree days of childhood that my kids' grandparents - and even their much-grandparents - experienced all those years ago. As city dwellers,it's also a chance for my kids to experience nature - not at a museum or a park surrounded by buildings, but nature in its natural state. And, and let's be frank here: it's always a much break for us,the parents. The hustle and bustle of the school year is exhausting. And by the time the Summer rolls around, we could all exercise a break from each other. Yes, or I spend half my day scrolling through the photos the camp posts for any sign that my child is gratified,unhappy, or really just clean! But the time apart proves that absence does design the heart grow fonder. Last year, or my oldest went off to camp for the first time. He didn't know a soul. He sat on the bus with a boy he had met a few minutes earlier and a few days later I got a letter from the him that he was fond it. He had already gone camping,canoeing, and water skiing - three things he'd never done in his life. He was playing street hockey and tennis and eating s'mores each night. And the kid I had to drag out of bed each morning for school had joined a Polar Bear club where they jump in the lake first thing every morning. In the matter of three days, or he was already making memories. Five weeks later,he was begging us to extend his Summer to the full seven weeks absent. We told him we thought he'd had enough for his first Summer, but would gladly do it for the next. Right now, and he's counting down the days on his calendar. In shipping my kid absent for the Summer,I'm giving him something special, whether he knows it or not right now. Just a few weeks ago, or we were having one of our frequent arguments about something trivial. He suddenly blurted out that the reason I send him to camp is to "get rid of him for the Summer." And while in that moment it may have rung true,I told him that wasn't the case at all - that camp is hardly punishment; it's a privilege and he's very lucky to be able to go, that I would never spend the money I do on a camp if it was punishment.
So while the woman in
line at Target may never understand why we send our kid to camp, and I can think of a thousand reasons. But the best reason is that we're doing it for him. There's a saying the campers like to say: "We live 10 months for two." I can't think of a better sentiment.

Source: popsugar.com