Opening Day: Welcome to Adventure Treks!

wpdev11 Jul, 2016

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Your child is finally at Adventure Treks! The airport day went as smoothly as one can expect when two dozen students arrive from all over the country, and now the adventure begins!

We’d like to thank you for the privilege of sharing your teen with us for the next few weeks. We fully understand the responsibility of keeping your child safe, and we won’t take this responsibility lightly.

We’re excited to be a small part in your parenting process. We expect your teenager to have a lot of fun at Adventure Treks, to see and do incredible things, and to make great friends. We are also hoping to make this a learning and growing experience, so your son or daughter returns home having the best, most growth-filled summer of his or her life.

As parents, we can’t give our children independence, self-esteem, or resilience. We can only place them in situations where they can develop it on their own. We want Adventure Treks to be one of those opportunities. We hope to be a “second family”—a home away from home with people who support your values but create space for your child to reach out, step out of his/her comfort zone, and become more independent. Adventure Treks is a great place to gain social confidence and a belief in one’s abilities and capacities. We greatly appreciate your support as we focus our energies on your child. Adventure Treks is designed to support our students and instructors first, and our families at home second.

On the home front, it’s common for parents to go through a range of emotions when their child leaves for camp. Believe it or not, psychologists have identified six steps that you may go through. They are:

    1. Worry
    2. Overcompensation (this means staying hyper-busy with extra work, or just cleaning the house 20 times a day)
    3. Loneliness
    4. Indulgence (eating a lot of brownies)
    5. Guilt (remember, Adventure Treks is just about the best thing you can do for your child)
    6. Serenity

Our goal is for you to get to stage 6 as quickly as possible. Let’s face it: You work hard, and you have raised a great kid. Kids need breaks from their parents, but parents also need a break from their kids. It’s healthy for everybody! We hope you will spend the next few weeks enjoying yourself and doing some things you are normally too busy to do. This is going to be an enriching time for your child. It should be one for you, too. (Sorry… We don’t run Adventure Treks for adults!) Right now, your child is our responsibility. Enjoy the break; your child will be home before you know it, tan, and standing a little taller having grown through new experiences.

Please remember: No news is good news! We will try hard to keep you informed of your child’s adventures through Treks Checks, but know our first priority is always making sure that our students are safe and having the times of their lives.

– John “Dock” Dockendorf, executive director

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