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5 Summer Camp Survival Tips (for Parents)

Even the most timid kids can get over their separation anxiety and have a great time at summer camp鈥攁s long as mom and dad don鈥檛 screw it up

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鈥淭here鈥檚 a business opportunity here. I know it,鈥 says Mike Knauf. The director of , a New York state summer camp that provides attendees with both serious experience in fine arts and performance and the occasional jolt of outdoor adrenaline, thinks some savvy entrepreneur could make big dollars by providing support services to mitigate the anxiety, grief, loneliness, and sundry freakouts brought on by sleepaway camp.

He means for parents, not the campers themselves. They do fine.

鈥淚 have not yet seen a child who鈥檚 not equipped to do this,鈥 Knauf says. If there are rough patches at camp, like, say, first-timers鈥 anxieties and homesickness, 鈥渢he camper will have counselors and directors and activity leaders looking out for them,鈥 not to mention mobs of other children and new ways to have fun.

Meanwhile, mom and dad got nothing. 鈥淎nd they鈥檙e no more prepared to deal than the child is,鈥 Knauf says. As in all of parenting, when responsible grownups can鈥檛 deal, it鈥檚 their children who pay. And the poor kids, through no fault of their own, miss out on their chance to be happy campers.

Here are some basics about camp-family dynamics and how not to screw it all up, drawn from Knauf and other pros鈥 wisdom, as well as a bit of my own fatherly input.

Hands Off

On this the pros are 100 percent in agreement: Parental over-involvement, in its many forms, is the Number One Camp Fun Killer. 鈥淭he only kids we鈥檝e had who could not adjust to camp, are the ones whose parents interfered and wouldn鈥檛 stop interfering,鈥 Knauf says. One of the great gifts of camp鈥搇earning to get along without Mom and Dad鈥搈eans that Mom and Dad have to let go, of the child, the expensive sleepaway experience they paid for, and their ambitions for the child (breakthroughs in wilderness skills, sports, arts, academics, whatever). Camp belongs to the camper, not you. Let your progeny do with it what he or she may.

The Wrong Thing to Say

The child, likely a first timer, gets panicky as camp approaches. To soothe her or him, you say 鈥淚f you鈥檙e not having fun, we鈥檒l come and bring you home.鈥 Wrong, wrong, wrong. 鈥淥f course there鈥檚 going to be a moment when she鈥檚 not having fun,鈥 Knauf says, 鈥淏ut the last thing we want to teach is that when things get tough, you go home. No, when things get tough at camp, you get help from people there, try new things.鈥 The guaranteed rescue also gives a child the wrong kind of control over parents, which is too tempting for some of them to ignore.

Keep Goodbyes Short and Sweet

Even if it鈥檚 killing you, don鈥檛 dramatize how it hurts to say goodbye to your baby, and how much you鈥檒l miss him or her, how empty and quiet the house will be, nah, nah, nah. The idea that you feel so bad is no comfort to your child. In fact, it adds guilt to the emotional mix. The kid may actually feel bad about having so much fun when Mom鈥檚 at home grieving. Messages should be about how much you love your offspring, how great camp will be, how you can鈥檛 wait to hear about it and see all the new cool stuff learned there. Whatever you say, keep it short.

Don鈥檛 Gloat

Camp can leave you temporarily childless, free to do cool stuff you used to. By all means, take advantage of that. But don鈥檛 beat the kid up with the great times you鈥檙e going to have. The main fun event has to be camp. Otherwise the poor kid misses both you and what you鈥檒l be doing, and may feel shunted aside, as if camp is more like a boarding kennel for youngsters. (Which, for some families, it unfortunately is.)

Don鈥檛 Change Too Much

Sure, changes can and will happen while Junior鈥檚 away, but don鈥檛 build them into the program. This is the wrong time to move into a new house, or even rearrange the old one in ways that drastically alter the kid鈥檚 personal space (You鈥檒l have a whole brand new bedroom, honey!), give away the dog or鈥搒ome troubled couples have actually done this鈥搒ee if Mommy and Daddy can work things out. Reassure the child that, when it鈥檚 all over, the same old home will still be there.

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