Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks again for the advice and encouragement. I reached out to the camp Director to let him know what I was hearing and he put me in touch with her counselor. Both were very kind and appreciated that I had said something. They assured me they could "help" in a way that was subtle and nonthreatening to the teen social radar.Whether it was their help or just the passing of time, things are going better. On Sunday, she mentioned going back next year when camp starts and staying longer to get to know more kids. No word from her since!
I agree that electronics are getting in the way, and next year if she attends camp she will go phone-free.
Great news!
Your DD sounds pretty terrific, by the way. She knew camp might be a little challenging, but she wanted to take a risk and put herself in a new situation that might push her boundaries a bit. To me, that speaks volumes about her confidence in herself and her sense of the support she's getting at home. Good for her!!
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks again for the advice and encouragement. I reached out to the camp Director to let him know what I was hearing and he put me in touch with her counselor. Both were very kind and appreciated that I had said something. They assured me they could "help" in a way that was subtle and nonthreatening to the teen social radar.Whether it was their help or just the passing of time, things are going better. On Sunday, she mentioned going back next year when camp starts and staying longer to get to know more kids. No word from her since!
I agree that electronics are getting in the way, and next year if she attends camp she will go phone-free.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks again for the advice and encouragement. I reached out to the camp Director to let him know what I was hearing and he put me in touch with her counselor. Both were very kind and appreciated that I had said something. They assured me they could "help" in a way that was subtle and nonthreatening to the teen social radar.Whether it was their help or just the passing of time, things are going better. On Sunday, she mentioned going back next year when camp starts and staying longer to get to know more kids. No word from her since!
I agree that electronics are getting in the way, and next year if she attends camp she will go phone-free.
Whether it was their help or just the passing of time, things are going better. On Sunday, she mentioned going back next year when camp starts and staying longer to get to know more kids. No word from her since!
Anonymous wrote:You might want to look for a camp that doesn't allow electronics. The immediacy of the communication would make many parents hop in their cars to pick up their unhappy, bored and/or homesick kids right away. My son wrote me a letter (his first letter to me ever) during his second year of camp and he wrote that he hated it and wanted to come home. I emailed the director that day and asked if he could find out what the problem was from his counselor. He emailed me back the next day that a horse had stepped on my son's foot and he was fine. That was what prompted him to write a letter about how he wanted to come home. When I picked him up, he laughed it off and said he had almost forgotten about that. By the time I got the letter (heck, by the time the letter was mailed), that was old news. If he had texted me that he hated it and wanted to come home, it would've turned into something when it was really nothing. Anyway, something to think about.
Anonymous wrote:No advice. Just wanted to say I hope your DD end soon up having enjoyed it. I also have a quiet tween DS and we have talked about camp. I was never a camp kid but I am pretty sure my son would LOVE the activity aspect of camp if he could get comfortable with the social aspect. I was a counselor at a sleep away camp and saw both the pluses and the drawbacks.