I've been reading a lot online lately about kids with disabilities going to/coming back from summer camp, or parents looking for a camp or program for their kids. I got inspired and decided to share my camp story.
Eighteen years ago (yep, I'm feelin' old now...) in the summer of 1996, I went to Easter Seals Camp Merrywood for the first time. Located on the Rideau River near Port Elmsley Ontario, Merrywood (MWC for short) is a summer camp for disabled children. A therapist had recommended it to my parents, so they signed me up for a one-week session.
I was eleven, and it was my first time away from home for more than a night, and I think my parents were more scared than I was. I was in a cabin with other boys, some of whom were my age. Everything was adapted to accommodate various disabilities. I tried tons of different activities, including sailing and archery for the first time (both of which I loved).
My first year, drawing something. Probably some kind of monster or dinosaur. |
The next summer, I went for another one-week session. Again, lots of fun.
Summer 1999, I attended a teen session for some of the older kids. Same activities, only more independence. I socialized more with some of the counsellors more since many of my cabin-mates were more on the lower-functioning side.
Cabin pic |
Summer 2000 was without a doubt my favourite year at Merrywood. That summer I had signed up for a two-week Teen Independence Camp session. Five guys and five girls between fifteen and eighteen years old learning a variety of things like cooking, budgeting, and other independent-living skills, while still enjoying camp. I learned a lot, and camp stuff was still fun, but what I enjoyed the most was just hanging out with other young adults from the group I was in as well as one or two others who were mostly older and higher-functioning. Two of the guys in my cabin even ended up being my roommates in college, and I still keep in touch with most of the people from that summer.
Group pic |
Cabin pic |
Leaving my mark on the Arts cabin |
Eleven years later |
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