“Keep it down, you guys, it’s Earl’s day off!” shrieked one
of my more thoughtful campers, inevitably waking me in the process.
Counselors were allotted one day off per week, minus, if
memory serves, the first week and the last week of camp, meaning that during
our fifty-six days of often 16-hour-a-day toil and travail, we would enjoy six
entire days off. So you can imagine my
response to being jerked awake by a considerate camper trying to insure that I
slept in.
Days off were created so counselors could recharge their seriously
depleted batteries. It was exhausting
and stressful proverbially “herding cats”, getting kids to their designated destinations
on time, keeping them from drowning or disappearing into the woods.
Or from being strung up by antagonistic cabin mates – not a
stretch, if you’ll pardon the allusion.
During my first summer, my hostile bunkmates did indeed try to hang
me. It was only through the efforts of
our beleaguered counselor that I was saved me from an imminent “necktie party”,
the atrocity followed by a stern lecture on the evils of nine year-old
vigilantism.
There was also, among other duties, activity planning, both
for your individual cabin and, when assigned, for unit-wide evening
entertainments, “General Swim” supervision, “Cleanup” supervision, “Free Play”
supervision, and “Night Duty”, during which scheduled counselors patrolled a
number of nearby cabins, handling potential disruptions and unforeseen circumstances
until midnight.
Also, if, as with me occurred twice, your campers were six years old, there were “Bedwetting
Prevention” responsibilities. You took
sleeping children to the bathroom before it was too late.
Further duties involved letter-writing, updating the
campers’ parents concerning their children’s progress, straining for the appropriate
diplomatic language to describe a child who would not shut up (“Howie is
extremely verbal”) or was caught peeking through a knothole at the Girls’
Washhouse (“Kenny is exceptionally curious.”)
The counselors were understandably fatigued.
Gifted since early childhood at eliciting pleasure from
minimal activity – my favorite period in Kindergarten was “Naps” – I… you know,
when your work day is scrupulously controlled by sirens and schedules, there is
an inordinate pleasure in simply luxuriating in your bunk, the cabin mercifully
quiet, the rambunctious campers led away by my assistant to a time-mandated
breakfast.
Though not before waking me up trying to insure I remained
asleep. (Can you sense the residual
bitterness, forty years down the line?)
Besides “nothing”, there were other things you could do on
your day off.
You could requisition a canoe and paddle that girl counselor
who’d flashed signals of interest to a secluded nearby island where you could…
Yeah. That never
happened.
Or you could team up with other counselors on their day off, one of them with a car, and visit
another camp where you hope to reconnect with this former fellow camper you
were interested in, your reunion leading to her suggesting a place she knows
where you can be alone together and…
Yeah, that didn’t happen either.
Some people look back fondly on cherished experiences.
Others look back fondly on cherished fantasies.
Doing.
Imagining. What’s the difference?
What I do
remembering doing on my days off was bumming a ride into Huntsville (nine miles
away), where I consumed greasy donuts at “Boley’s” and ate T-bone steak at
McDonald’s (no connection to the ubiquitous fast food empire, whose menu to
this day excludes T-bone steaks.)
It is not just the ineffable satisfaction of consuming
delicacies unavailable at camp. It’s the
delirious freedom of eating donuts before dinner, and having whatever dinner you personally selected at any time you decided to eat it!
No institutional organization. No limiting structure. Suddenly liberated, you felt giddily
light-headed.
“Free at last! Free at last!
I don’t have to eat liver. Free
at last!”
Capping this resuscitating experience, the specter of
“tomorrow” looming ominously on the horizon, was a movie at Huntsville’s local
– and only – movie theater.
There were no movies at camp, except
when it rained during a camp-wide program.
Only then, they showed movies, and it was always the same movie – Lily.
(“A song of love is a sad song…”)
This back-up alternative programming became so habitual when the showers
arrived the cognoscenti observed,
“It’s beginning to ‘Lily.’”)
The only problem with the Huntsville
movie experience was…
I sit down with my popcorn, the
lights go out, the curtain goes up, the opening titles begin to roll, and
within minutes…
… I am fast asleep.
It was an agonizing
disappointment. I had maneuvered my day
off to land specifically when Major
Dundee was scheduled to be shown. It
was a western – not Where The Boys Are
– something I actually wanted to see!
Featuring numerous battle scenes, Major Dundee was a hugely cacophonous
operation. Nobody went quietly.
Except me.
The movie ended, they woke me up,
we drove back to camp, and my day off was over.
Oh well. At least I had gotten the chance to purchase
the most recent TV Guide. There was no TV at camp. I liked reading what I was missing.
When I taught school in England,
our headmaster, Mr. Kinsman, revealed that he refused to ever take vacations,
dreading the sensation of re-shouldering his onerous responsibilities after
they were over.
I understood that feeling when the
camp’s seven-fifteen A.M. “wake-up” siren called me back to the grueling grind. Maybe it was, in fact, better not to have a
day off.
Still, I counted the days until my
next one.
2 comments:
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Well "wheezer",it's 60 years ago this summer that I first went off to Camp Ogama and had the unique opportunity of spending an entire summer with you and similarly aged boys who,like yourself, would have preferred the city or at the very least, Jackson's Point. This morning, as our cottage guests were preparing for an afternoon trek to Pontool for a dedication honouring the founding Jews of this summer enclave, I referenced my experiences as a child at the Tides Hotel. Googling, I was immediately confronted by your blog and wonderful recounting of life in the 50's in the near north and more to the point, Camp Ogama. The memories are flooding back to those days( I returned in 1959, the Camp's Bar MITZVAH year), and then moved on. I still maintain friendships, which in spite of the decades, continue and flourish.
I am excited to have discovered your blog and will follow moving forward. You have awakened memories of innocence and uncomplicated times and I thank you for that.
See you at the tuck shop,
Howard( Goldstein), BScMD, Ogama 56,59)
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