6 Tips for Nieces and Nephews off to Summer Camp!
By Melanie Kwestel
It’s that time of the year when school is out
and the proverbial swimming hole is calling. Aunts always look forward
to time with their special nephews and nieces, but what if said children
are going to summer camp instead of making s’mores with you?
1. Summer camp can be a formative, positive experience for children. It
helps them develop an identity separate from their parents or other
adults, creates resiliency, and enables them learn how to get along with
peers. Some children can’t wait to get on that camp bus. Others need a
little push. Regardless of where on the spectrum your favorite children
lie, there are ways to make the experience more powerful and fun for
them.
2. Help the little darlings plan. Talk to them about
camp and the things they will do. If they seem a little hesitant,
reassure them that parents and Savvy Aunties are in their corner. Choose
a special gift that you can send to camp as a reminder of your
presence. It could be a stuffed animal, a baseball cap, even a funny
toothbrush.
3. Communicate! Stay in touch. Send email and
snail mail. As anyone who has ever been to camp knows, mail call can be
the best part of the day – if you’re the one getting the mail. Check
with the children’s parents about how to communicate. Most camps do not
download attachments to email, for example. You can also send packages
with rainy day activities and books. Here, too, it’s best to check
before mailing; many camps do not allow food packages and will return
them to senders.
4.Visit! If parents allow, tag along on
visiting day. Yes, it’s a long drive. And yes, there will be traffic on
those country roads. But it’s all worth it for those big smiles and
giant hugs. However, remember one important rule of visiting day: the
amount of clinging is directly proportional to the amount of anxiety
your niece or nephew has about camp. The most successful visiting days
are those where the family picnics together, laughs a lot, and then
wonders why campers are so anxious to get back to friends after an hour
or two. This is especially true as campers get older. One year my very
savvy nephew said, “Wow! Great food. Thanks for the candy! You can go
home now.” Of course, I didn’t leave, but I was thrilled that he was
having such a good time.
5. Develop a secret code. Find
something that the two of you will have in common all summer long. One
year my niece and I decided on the moon. “I’ll think of you whenever I
look at the moon, and you think of me,” she announced. When she came
home (after a wonderful summer) she said that she never missed me,
because she knew she could see me before she went to sleep.
6. Attitude is everything!
This is perhaps the most important piece of advice. Over the years I’ve
found that the most successful campers were those whose parents (and
aunts) went to summer camp and loved it. They were predisposed to like
camp because their parents had such great stories about their own
experiences. So keep the bug and mice infestation stories to a minimum,
leave Cropsey out of your tales, and emphasize the good. Even if you
cried yourself to sleep for eight solid weeks, there’s no reason to
assume your nieces and nephews will do the same. Hopefully, they will
love it. And how will you know? They’ll be too busy to write!
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Melanie
S. Kwestel is the director of communications of Chai Lifeline, an
organization that brings hope and joy to seriously ill children and
their families and the Savvy Auntie of seven nieces and nephews and 23
great nieces and nephews.
Photo: SerrNovik
Updated and republished: June 28, 2016
Originally published, July 2014