Anonymous wrote:OP I'm someone that may have said oh don't make her go, but I read this article recently and the part on the SPACE intervention with kids with anxiety has really stuck with me. I'm not saying your daughter has anxiety, but this idea that accommodating our kids fears doesn't usually help them all this much has stuck with me so I thought it might help you, and given it I think I would do a LOT of supporting, but help her prep to stick with it. This is an opportunity as a parent to help her through a hard thing for her. We want to use those opportunities while they are still in our house so that when they leave and are on their own, they have the tools to handle it. To cope. Of course we want to be responsive to them but there is a balance.
The article is long - you can honestly do control find for "SPACE" and you'll see the intervention I'm talking about. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/05/childhood-in-an-anxious-age/609079/
Anonymous wrote:This just happened to us! DD12 was slated to go to a one week sleepaway camp with her best friend. Friend tested positive for COVID a few days before camp and had to bail. DD suffers from some anxiety and this caused a huge meltdown. I made her go (with a promise I would pick her up early if she was truly miserable) and she ended up having a great time and making new friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd let her skip, assuming you're not out a substantial amount of money. Frankly, kids have been through enough stress during the pandemic; I'm not adding to that if I can help it. I'm reasonably strict as a parent, but I'm not mean.
It's ONE WEEK.
+1 Resilience, people. A little grit.
Lol, yeah. Is that what you tell yourself?
God, I am so, so tired of people who throw around the term "resilience" when it comes to kids, who clearly have no idea what it really means.
What does it mean in this particular camp context? I feel like allowing a kid to cancel on something already paid for at the last minute just because their friend isn’t going is not conducive to resilience.
It's not relevant in this context, unless the PP is hoping the kid will have a lousy time but ultimately be no worse for wear. There are plenty of opportunities to face adversity and challenge in regular daily life, and with the support of close adults. Purposely exposing your kid to more adversity than they may be able to handle solo isn't fostering resilience.
FWIW, I don't generally let my kids back out of commitments. You're nervous about the swim meet? Do your best, but you're not scratching. Worried you'll screw up at the violin recital? That might happen, but I know you'll get through it. Heck, my own 10 year old DD didn't have the most fun at her first week of day camp, because none of her friends ended up going, which she didn't anticipate. I absolutely encouraged her each morning, checked in at pick up about connections she'd made, etc., but I didn't let her stay home.
But a week of sleepaway camp, for a kid who doesn't want to attend? Solely to prove I'm a "hardass"? Not my thing.
(I do think a PP's suggestion to contact the camp director is a good one. If I were the OP, I'd go that route first, at least to gather more data about the situation, get a sense of how many other kids might be there solo, etc.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2 points -
1. there is a long waitlist for this camp. If you are going to bail reach out NOW so they can get another girl in the spot.
2. I would encourage her to go and reach out to the camp lead and tell them the situation. my experiences with local girl scout camps are they are great for making sure girls are with a cabin that has a balance of kids who do not come with buddies.
This- I'd ask the camp if there are other kids from her school or area. If not, I'd ask if they have an incoming camper she could connect with beforehand- someone in her cabin even.
Anonymous wrote:My introverted DD who doesn't make friends easily went without knowing anyone went to sleep away camp and had a fantastic time.
It wasn't GS camp. The schedule was so busy and the activities allowed for socializing . I was hoping that she would make a friend, but she didn't and still enjoyed it and wants to go back.
I would encourage DD to go, but not force it if you think it's just too much for her to handle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd let her skip, assuming you're not out a substantial amount of money. Frankly, kids have been through enough stress during the pandemic; I'm not adding to that if I can help it. I'm reasonably strict as a parent, but I'm not mean.
It's ONE WEEK.
+1 Resilience, people. A little grit.
Lol, yeah. Is that what you tell yourself?
God, I am so, so tired of people who throw around the term "resilience" when it comes to kids, who clearly have no idea what it really means.
What does it mean in this particular camp context? I feel like allowing a kid to cancel on something already paid for at the last minute just because their friend isn’t going is not conducive to resilience.
Anonymous wrote:2 points -
1. there is a long waitlist for this camp. If you are going to bail reach out NOW so they can get another girl in the spot.
2. I would encourage her to go and reach out to the camp lead and tell them the situation. my experiences with local girl scout camps are they are great for making sure girls are with a cabin that has a balance of kids who do not come with buddies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd let her skip, assuming you're not out a substantial amount of money. Frankly, kids have been through enough stress during the pandemic; I'm not adding to that if I can help it. I'm reasonably strict as a parent, but I'm not mean.
It's ONE WEEK.
+1 Resilience, people. A little grit.
Lol, yeah. Is that what you tell yourself?
God, I am so, so tired of people who throw around the term "resilience" when it comes to kids, who clearly have no idea what it really means.