What Really Goes on at Church Camp (Courtney McKinney-Whitaker)
What Really Goes On at Church Camp
In one of the last episodes of Friends, Monica and Chandler meet the teenage birthmother of their
twins. They ask her what kind of plans she has for the summer, and she tells
them she's heading to church camp, which kind of baffles them, since...she's
the teenage birthmother of their twins. But I always thought that that episode
had surely been written by someone who knew all about church camp.
Lest you get any ideas related to the Westboro
Baptist Church or that documentary I can't remember the name of about that super nutso evangelical camp or
the "pray the gay away" type of thing, let me allay your assumptions
and fears by telling you that I grew up Methodist, and we wouldn't be caught
dead drawing the kind of attention to ourselves that might attract a news or
documentary crew.
More specifically, I grew up in the South Carolina
Conference of the United Methodist Church, and in the SCC of the UMC, there are
(or were in the late 90s), two summer week-long events for youth: Youth Annual
Conference (YAC) and Leadership Week.
These events took place on the campuses of either
Columbia College in Columbia or Wofford College in Spartanburg. Hundreds of
teenagers in college dorms for a week.
I hope you see where this is headed.
The main—and for many people, I suspect, the
only—reason for attending either YAC or Leadership Week (which was smaller and
more, ahem, intimate) was to meet and hook up with people who didn't go to your
school or even live in your part of the state. It was a whole new market! The
possibilities were endless! (I use the term "hook up" to apply to a
wide range of activities—from snuggling on one of the many couches—so many
couches—never before or since have I seen so many couches—to this guy named
Tyler, who I'm pretty sure slept with half the girls in the SCC before he was
out of high school.)
YAC and Leadership Week were both in July, so
ideally you wanted to meet a boy at YAC so your endless love could continue at
least through Leadership Week, though if you could sing you could try out for
Conference Choir, which toured the state together in June, so if you snagged a
man at Conference Choir you were golden for at least two months. There was this
guy named Jeff, and it was almost obligatory that if you were a girl in the
SCC, you had to have a crush on Jeff at some point.
One of my lifetime claims
to fame is that I never had a crush on Jeff. We really were just friends, and
he even wrote me a hilarious parody of "No Scrubs" to cheer me up
when I got dumped one time. In a book that would have led us straight to
coupledom, but in real life I still didn't have a crush on Jeff.
In August, there was a youth weekend at Lake
Junaluska, which was smaller and more heavily chaperoned than events earlier in
the summer, so it was hard to start something there, but you could possibly
continue a relationship begun in Conference Choir, YAC, or Leadership Week.
Once I hung out with the aforementioned Tyler at Lake Junaluska because we
rather oddly ended up being the only people there who already knew each other.
He later sent me an email saying he would have slept with me if I had been up
for it. (Uh, thanks? He never said a word about it at the time—in fact, we
spent that entire weekend without a whiff of romance between us. In retrospect,
I think Tyler's reputation may have been built entirely by Tyler.)
All of these events had dances on the last night,
which seems kind of counterintuitive. If, as a chaperone, you spent your entire
week trying to keep these kids off each other, why would you plan a dance of
all things? A dance where you had to keep prying them apart to leave room for
the Holy Spirit, who according to the UMY Book of Discipline, apparently
requires at least six inches?
The great advantage of UMY events, for me, was that
these boys didn't know me. They didn't necessarily know I was an introvert who
pretended not to be one. They didn't know I talked too much and had no ability
to shut up when shutting up might have made me more popular. (Not that I didn't
care about being popular, I was just really bad at all the things you had to do
to be that way. Still am.) Sometimes boys liked me there! Boys never liked me
in real life!
Away from my usual routine, I got to reinvent
myself, and I think that's one of the main advantages of summer love. Summer,
especially for kids and teachers, is a liminal time and space. It sets us free
from the constraints of who we are during the school year and gives us a chance
to try new things and be new people.
(P.S. I would love to have had pictures with this
post, but I've been in a liminal space of my own for the past few weeks during
a cross-country move, and I have no idea where the pictures are. Though there
are many, I assure you.)
Courtney, I think there's a whole book in here. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteProbably...names changed, of course ;-)
DeleteMAN, I love that line about reinventing yourself.
ReplyDeleteThe benefit of new situations!
DeleteThis was so much fun to read.
ReplyDeleteIt was a lot of fun to write.
DeleteHa! I thought Catholics were the only ones who insisted on "room for the Holy Ghost" at dances! :D
ReplyDelete