Several decades ago, I
compiled an extensive accumulation of notes on my experiences at summer
camp. Over the years, I have drawn on
those notes for blog posts under the umbrella title of “Summer Times.” Today, I offer a short offering (with minor adjustments,
and additional commentary) dating from, if not the time of the events
themselves, a time decades closer to them than today.
Three purposes are
served by this exerptation from my notes:
I have an example of
how remarkably little my “back then” writing style and point of view differ
from my considerably more recent offerings.
I have a
July-appropriate camp reminiscence.
I have a virtually
pre-written story, so I am relieved of having to come up with anything new. It’s like a day off. But with a story.
The locale is Camp
Ogama, nine miles from Huntsville, in Muskoka, Ontario, Canada. The specific locale is Fox Lake, a two-mile
expanse of often refrigerator-cold, brown water.
I am presently an
unwilling participant of Swim Instruction, an obligatory activity, scheduled
twice weekly for every camper. I am
cowering on the dock, a nine year-old non-swimmer, though things changed very
little as I got older and more buoyant.
A gargantuan Swim Instructor
hovers over me, waiting impatiently, as I prepare, in my own deliberate fashion,
to submit my quivering body to the uncertainty of the Deep.
Which was actually only
up to my chest.
Let us begin.
There are a lot of people who say, “There are two kinds of
people.” My Third-Cousin Herschel was
one of them.
“There are two kinds of bald people,” Cousin Herschel would
say, “those with hair and those without.”
That’s a bad example of the genre, but I use it so mine
won’t sound so bad.
Observation: Mine isn’t bad at all. Saying it was was lazy writing. Today, I would fess up and say, “That’s a bad
example of the genre. I just used it, so
I could start funny.” I have gotten more
honest over the years.
Sorry, Cousin Herschel.
(For selling you down the river.)
My version is
this. There are two kinds of people – people
who dive in and people who ease in.
There is a consistency in those actions.
Those who dive in always dive in.
Those who ease in always ease in.
I always ease in.
I was sure if I dove into the water, my heart would say,
“What!” and stop, and I’d be dead. I am
totally convinced that it would be a terminal shock to my system, even though I
see people diving in all the time and their
systems don’t seem to be shocked at all.
Some of them appear to actually enjoy
it. But that’s them, and this is
me.
I always ease in.
How? The traditional
“easing in “ procedure. You wade into
the water up to your knees – keeping away from the splashers. You reach into the water, pat some on each
wrist and on the back of your neck – it always drips down, and makes you shiver. Then, you ease in a little more, maybe up to
your bathing suit.
The process so far takes about ten minutes.
If the water’s wavy, some will slop up your chest, giving
you more shivers, and reminding you
what it would feel like if you dove in.
You ease in a little further, maybe up to your ribcage,
submerging your heart, and some feelers in your chest that seem extremely sensitive
to temperature changes. I don’t know if
they even exist, but they’re there for me.
Finally, you bend you knees, and you duck down up to your
neck. By then, you are hopeful that Swim
Instruction is over and you can get out of the water.
Additional
Observation: There is no question of
immersing myself completely. If they had
required me to put my head under water, I would have immediately called my
mother and demanded that she take me home.
I had had surgery on both eyes when I was two, and was certain that if I
went totally under, the water would seep in through the (long healed) place where
they’d put in the stitches and drown my brain.
You can imagine that easer-inners experienced considerable
difficulty acquiring “buddies” for General Swim. * Who wants to wait that long for the entire
ritual to unfold?
* The twice-daily, maybe forty-minute-long
General Swims were a supervised free-swimming activity, where campers were
required to swim paired up with “buddies.”
A whistle would be blown every few minutes, at which time, all water
activities would cease, the buddies would grab each others’ hands and raise
them high in the air, to be counted and matched with the number of swimmers
recorded on a “Sign-in Board.” This safety process was meant to determine that
nobody had drowned since the previous whistle.
It would seem to be unnecessary.
If your “buddy” had disappeared under the water, you would think you
would not wait till the next “whistle” to report it. Unless you were having a really good time
without them.
Joke.
When I was a counselor
assigned to “Swim Duty” I was required to count those pairings when the whistle
blew, double-checking other “Swim Duty” counselors engaged in the same
operation. Especially on busy “General
Swims” when campers were all bunched together, I abandoned the possibility of
an accurate count, and simply went along with the counters who had gone before
me. I dreaded being asked first,
invariably saying, “Ask someone else.”
Even two “easer inners” had their own tempos, so that slow
as each of them were, they could still get on each others’ nerves, one going
straight to “knees”, the other taking a minute or two to acquaint his ankles
with the wonderful world of water.
You can see these two groups falling into their predictable
patterns in non-watery pursuits. Check out how a guy removes a Band-Aid from a
place on his body where’s there’s hair, and you will know for a certainty how
he gets into the water. You can count on a slow Band-Aid remover being
an equally slow water getter-inner.
I bet there’s not one person in a million who pulls off Band-Aids
fast and gets in the water slow. Or vice
versa.
Easer-inners ease into everything. Relationships, a career, trying new foods. The behavior is invariably the same – always
cautious, always methodical. It looks
like the hard way of doing things, but, the way things are for them, it’s those
people’s only choice.
And by “those people”,
I mean me.
We have this firm belief about how our body is going to
react if we pull something shocking and sudden on it, and we don’t do it. Of course, our culture picks a favorite way
of how people should behave, and they picked fast, so we slow ones take a lot
of heat. Rather than bold and decisive,
we are branded tentative, even cowardly.
Which, I believe is wrong. It
takes a ton of courage to face pulling a Band-Aid off really slow. You have no idea how painful that is.
There are dueling phrases reflecting the two kinds of people. There is “He who hesitates is lost” and
there’s “Look before you leap.”
I find a lot of wisdom in that second admonition. And the person who thought it up?
I bet they really took their time.
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