In this blog I would like
to address a topic that I only briefly mentioned in my last blog. I believe I
worded it something like, “Mataponi is an environment in which silliness is as
valuable as chocolate chip cookies.” I’d like to shed light on this particular
comparison, which while entertaining at face value, doesn’t nearly give enough
information to accurately depict the phenomenon to which I’m referring. In
order to give proper credit where credit is due, I will use this blog entry to
provide at least some of the specifics that I’ve seen throughout my twelve
summers at Mataponi of both silliness and chocolate chip cookies.
Snack occurs between fourth and fifth period – it’s a period after lunch and
two periods before the end of the day. This particular period has for my entire
duration at Mataponi, been the time that the two youngest divisions at camp
(the juniors and middie A’s) are at the waterfront. The juniors have boating
and middie A’s have swimming, and then they switch. Snack occurs right in
between this switch. On days that there are chocolate chip cookies for snack
(or chipwhiches, which is camp vernacular for two chocolate chip cookies with
ice cream in the middle) there are about a hundred young girls cheering and
screaming as they sprint up the hill from the waterfront to the dining hall in
their multicolored bathing suits to get their hands on the snack. The only way
to accurately describe it is to say that at camp, chipwhiches are received with
as much enthusiasm as the Beatles would have been in Times Square at the height
of their popularity. Because I’ve worked at athletics for the past four summers,
something similar can be witnessed from the athletics fields as the entire camp
sprints down the hill to the dining hall, shouting as they go to pass the word
about the heralded snack.
Usually the word leaks sometime earlier in the week, whispered down the lane
from the girls who have cooking class to their bunkmates (“There’s going to be
cookies for snack on Wednesday!”) So that by the time snack comes on Wednesday
everyone is practically trembling with anticipation. Of course there’s a perpetually
stocked fruit bar which the ripest and most delicious fruit for those opting
for the healthy option, and even those campers with gluten or dairy allergies
are still swept into the hysteria and grinning right along with their peers
while they eat a popsicle or another suitable substitute. No one is left out of
the midday hype that is snack.
So now – when I say that silliness is a trait regarded as highly as chocolate
chip cookies, it will be understood what I mean. Silliness is the best trait to
possibly have at Mataponi. Maybe when these girls are at school during the year
their affinity for spoken word poetry or science fact of the day or the song
they wrote about the maintenance men is of no interest to their peers but it’s
these girls who shine at camp – girls whose talents may be ignored or silenced
in school. I remember growing up there was a girl who had a hat full of
scientific facts and every morning she would pull one out and read it. This
became a bunk tradition and spread fast, while at first only her bunkmates
wanted to know the fact of the day, she would soon be stopped throughout her
day by just about everyone she passed who would want to know the fact of the
day. The same can be seen by the camper who practices impersonations and who
has learned the entire dance featured on episode 203 of Zoe 101 – these girls’
accomplishments are in no way confined to their bunk but are shared in the
consciousness of the entire camp.
There are also several events throughout the summer to showcase the eccentric
talents of campers. Saturday night campfires feature an act segment that gives
campers a week to prepare their acts, so this is a time that the perfectly
cultivated bunk dance or song comes to light, and will sweep the camp for a
week until the next week when the next dance or song is performed. My bunk
still sings our McDonald’s song that our counselor taught us when we were
eight, and we’re all staff in our twenties now. Let me put it this way – each
girl’s “camp fame” is about as proportionate to their level of silliness and no
one is left out. Everyone is celebrated for something. In the real world,
laughter, eccentricity, silliness, these are traits to be silenced to give way
to demanding curriculums and homework and the drone of daily life. At Mataponi,
each camper is renowned, celebrated, and loved for being nothing other than
exactly who she is. And that is something that truly is as wonderful as
chocolate chip cookies.
Written by Sara Sherr.