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November 2007 Survey
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Grief Camp Heals Wounds of LossPublished: April 28, 2003by: Dena J. Dyer
“They said the gift was meant for a time when someone died in my family—so I could call them and they could help me as much as the camp had helped them,” Cranford says. Eleven years later, Cranford is volunteer director
of Camp El Tesoro de la Vida (translated “the
treasure of life”), a one-week grief camp sponsored
by Camp Fire USA and held at Camp El Tesoro in Hood
County, Texas. Cranford is one of 60 adults in the
program’s volunteer force. Last year, the camp
hosted nearly 100 children who had lost a parent,
sibling or friend. Some of the staff members are counselors
for El Tesoro’s regular summer sessions, and
others are professionals who love kids and are sensitive
to how losing a loved one affects them. Emotional, but Healing Time Willis says, “The magic of the camp is that everyone there knows what it feels like to have someone in his or her life die. For a child, that is powerful. They can talk, be angry or sad, or cry, and no one will make fun of them.” Cranford says that the children come to camp with “lots of baggage,” but counselors try to help kids through the grieving process at their own pace. “We have had school counselors tell kids that it has been a year since their parent died and they should be over it,” Cranford says. “Parents are dealing with their own grief, and having to sometimes be a single parent to their kids. The kids don’t want to be a burden, so they don’t talk about what they’re going through.” During Cranford’s second year, he met a young child who was having a particularly difficult time with the death of his father. “He really warmed up to me,” Cranford says, “and the last day he was fighting with the other guys to be near me.” After the closing ceremony, Cranford saw the child’s mother standing to the side and crying. When he asked her if she was okay, she explained that her son had not let anyone touch him or get close to him since his father had died. “When she saw him pushing other boys out of the way to stand next to me and have my arm around him, she knew he was going to be okay,” Cranford says. Treasure out of Loss The volunteers say the week is physically and emotionally exhausting, but extremely rewarding. Children, too, return for two or three years. “We rarely bring someone back after that,” says Cranford. “Our therapists interview families, counselors and other parties each year to determine need. And if we think the grief aspect of camp is not necessary any longer, we offer one of the regular camp weeks at El Tesoro as an option for the child.” Cranford’s goal for Camp de la Vida is simple. “It’s important that the campers are kids first and grievers second,” he says. “Most of their days are spent horseback riding, fishing, swimming or just playing.” And each year, the week of camp closes with a moving ceremony: staffers plant a tree in memory of the loved ones who died, and each child puts a painted rock under the tree to honor their deceased friend or family member. “Camp de la Vida helped me in so many ways,” says Monica Careel. “I’m so glad there’s a place like that.” “Camp is the best thing I do all year,” Willis says. “I get to see the best times and the worst times that these children go through.” Cranford offers this advice to others wishing to start their own grief camp for kids: “Form a very strong base of volunteers. The strength of our camp is the rich base of dedicated volunteers who give their support all year long. I would love to say it is my incredible leadership that makes this camp what it is, but truthfully my job is making our staff feel valued and loved—they do all the rest.” Resources:
Dena Dyer is a freelance writer living in Texas.
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