I attended Cub Scout camp last week with my son, 5 other Cub Scouts and three other parents. It was a great time, and I learned a lot, including some life lessons we can all learn from:
Keep the “Get Ready List” simple:
Imagine with me: 20 people sharing one “Kaebo” (restroom and shower house). Now imagine the line to get in and out of the kaebo at 7 am, before our 7:45 am Flag Raising ceremony and breakfast. Long line, short time frame, short attention spans.
Needless to say, the Get Ready List for the scouts and we leaders was very short. Get up, get dressed, brush your teeth, use the kaebo if there is time. That’s it. Showering, cleaning up and anything else waited until later in the day. Luckily (or not), personal hygiene is not a huge priority at a camp in the forest for 8-11 year old boys and their leaders.
Simplify your morning. Keep the Get Ready list short and the directions clear.
Tell them, tell them again, tell them one more time.
You know that really short “Get Ready List”? It still needs repeating, especially early in the morning and late in the evening. For scouts, for family, even for co-workers.
Keep your message (whatever it is) simple, and repeat it over and over and over again.
Don’t wait until its time to leave to announce you can’t find something.
Get ready early so that you can spend time searching for lost items. Planning ahead allows time for searching, whereas announcing for the first time that something is lost as we leave camp does not. Plus, then your scout leader won’t get a furrowed brow!
Get ready early. This holds true not only for flashlights and swim trunks, but briefcases and projects as well.
When you have the chance to nap, take a nap. Same goes for using the washroom.
I loved my little tent in the woods. My cot was comfortable, and the evenings were cool and great for sleeping bags! But the cicadas, occasional mosquitoes and rain interfered with our sleep some nights. A quiet half hour in camp one afternoon afforded the best nap ever, with the sound of the wind in the trees to put me to sleep. When you can nap, do so.
And did I mention the line at our bathroom door? We (at least the women) got in the habit of using the nicest Kaebos around camp whenever the opportunities presented themselves.
When you find a teaching moment, teach.
There are lots of really cool teaching moments in life, but especially at Cub Scout camp in a national forest. Nature, life, character building, life skills, etc. And luckily, when life’s pace slows down a bit, we can seize teaching moments as they occur, and really connect with each other and ourselves.
Slow down. Slow way down.
Camp was Monday to Friday, in a national forest. My car was parked at least half a mile away from our campsite except for move-in and move-out. We walked a lot, everywhere. had limited wi-fi and cell signal, and no laptop. We had a consistent and clear routine as our daily schedule, and nothing else on the to-do list. It was lovely.
I can’t take you all to camp with me, but we can all learn good things about life from my experience. Let me know which lesson resonates with you the most!
Absolutely! Having been at camp last year, and will be going up next week, I plan to keep it simple! FYI, it’s kybo-it stands for “keep your bowels open.”