Playtimes HK Magazine Autumn Issue 2019 | Page 39

education camp. Instead, I watched him as he got off the bus, slightly scowling. The first thing he did was lift his shirt to show me a nasty gash on his hip from a fall. He was close to tears when he told me he repeatedly asked to come home and was not allowed. He recounted finally falling asleep around 1am the first night of camp and how tired he was, such that the second night he slept at 9pm. I sympathised. But actually, I had never been to a school camp. Did I really understand? My son told me on this very day that he would NOT be attending the year 5 camp the following year. I casually agreed but brushed off his comment because it was a whole year away. When you’re a child, a year is a long time and a lot can happen in terms of maturity and growth. I presumed he would change his mind by the time year 5 camp rolled around. Guess what? He didn’t. When year 5 started, he reminded me that he would not be going to camp this year. It was the middle of August after all and camp wasn’t until early November, so I thought there was still time for us to convince him to go. I did my job encouraging him, saying he would be with his friends and they would all have such fun together. We looked at the camp information online. We talked about with whom he would share a camp cabin. I did my best to explain that camp was mandatory. I even said he had to go and that all of his friends were going, some of whom also didn’t want to go. In the end, there was no changing his mind and because I had initially agreed, there was no changing mine either. I couldn’t go back on my word. I had to ask myself, would missing camp change his life? Is my life any better or worse for not having been to a school camp at his age? The schools I attended in the United States didn’t do camps for kids this young. My husband didn’t go to camp at this age in Australia either. So we decided, after much agonising over it all, to let him skip camp. By not forcing my child to do something totally against his will, I was not only staying true to my word but also offering him a deeper level of trust in me that will surely benefit both of us in the future. We haven’t addressed year 6 camp yet, but my guess is that he will want to go. He’s older now and more confident than ever. Thomas (age 10) “I’m kind of looking forward to school camp because it’s a new experience, I’m nervous though because I like being with my family.” From a reluctant child’s perspective Florence Clifford, now age 17, looks back at her year’s attending, and not attending, school camp. Initially I didn’t want to go to school camp—the idea of spending two or three nights away from home, in a completely unfamiliar place, at the age of eight didn’t exactly appeal to me. For a quiet, bookish child, the information packs full of kayaking, obstacle courses and dreaded ‘team- building’ exercises were equally unappealing. Plus, I could be quite contrary—and once I’d made up my mind that I wasn’t going to do something, being told it was mandatory only made me more determined not to give in and go. Autumn 2019 37