When I started working at Jameson Camp one year ago, I was an innocent little boy. Fast forward to today and I am innocent no more. Today I am a grown little boy.
If you've followed along with this blog, I'd like to say thank you. Most of the time my writing was about nonsense but every now and then the blog was actually worth reading. For those 2 or 3 times it was, I hope you enjoyed my thoughts.
Working at Jameson has been a lot of fun and I'll leave with nothing but good memories. Of course Yvonne has tried her darndest to scare me and leave me broken but I've held strong. She is one of my 6 readers so I should be nice to her with this last post.
I changed the look of the wall in this office...
Forever my face will look upon camp. Or at least until they tear it down. Ashley was already eyeing my desk so it could be gone by Monday.
Thanks for a fun year. Best wishes to all and to all a good night!
Jameson Camp
Friday, July 28, 2017
Thursday, July 27, 2017
Seizing Opportunities
Breanna Bobbitt
Marketing Intern
Jameson Camp is a fun-filled environment for kids to enjoy
the outdoors and make memories, but it is also a place for growth and new opportunities.
However, many may overlook the fact that it can be a life changing place for
the counselors. Some may call it a job, while others call it home. That’s the case
for Brianne Sandlin who has made her mark at Jameson.
Currently serving as the Counselor-In-Training Coordinator, Brianne
has had multiple titles at Jameson including Journalism Instructor, Senior Counselor
and Spring Intern. Like many of the counselors, Brianne got her start as a
camper. At the age of thirteen her grandmother was fishing online for summer
camps when she stumbled across Jameson’s website. Impressed, she signed her up
and paid for her first summer.
“I was nervous. I came because I had been recently diagnosed
with diabetes and I was really quiet and reserved, but I remember towards the
end of the week, it was before bed, I got up and danced on my bed and that’s
when I knew I wanted to be here,” Brianne said. So much so that she seized the opportunity, when recommended
by a counselor, to be a part of the youth leadership program after her first
week.
From community events, workshops and spring break trips, the
youth leadership program provided a lot of opportunities and new experiences
for Brianne. She recalls one of her most memorable moments was during her ACE
II trip on the Appalachian Trail where she and previous camper and counselor
Braydon Jefferson got a surprise visit during their quest to watch the sunset.
“Me and Braydon didn’t have our glasses on and the other
girl could see and she was like, ‘there’s something in the bushes over there
and we just kind of brushed her off and then we heard something and it was a
bear. So that was interesting,” Brianne said.
Fortunately, she was able to leave that trip in one piece
and share the story with others about the time she tripped up the mountain,
running from a bear. “I’m very clumsy,” Brianne said. That obstacle wouldn’t be the only one she would face and
coincidently Jameson came in her life at the right time. When she first came to
came to Jameson, she was in the middle of bouncing from school to school, and
finding the right fit was a struggle.
However, that would soon change. In April of her sophomore
year in high school, Brianne went on a spring break trip as part of her youth
leadership experience with Jameson. While there, Braydon and camper As’samada
told her about a small private high school they attended called Providence
Cristo Rey. The friendship would soon open a new door for her. With that
connection at Jameson, she found the school that she would spend the remainder
of her high school experience at and from which she would eventually graduate. Her senior year, Jameson awarded her the Julie Marsh scholarship to help pay
for college. “It’s the networking you make because of camp
like the people I’ve met at camp like Braydon and As’samada. If I never
would’ve met them and done the whole networking thing, I never would’ve known
about Providence and I never would’ve graduated from Providence,” Brianne said.
Going on her third summer
working here, Brianne has devoted a lot of time
and made camp a top priority. She’s worked
with diverse group of kids with
different stories and different challenges and has gotten very close with many
of the campers.
“I tend to like the
kids who have the more difficult behavior. A big thing we say to our staff
during the summer is they’re all good kids, they just have difficult behavior.
So I get attached to the ones that I work with the most which are usually the
kids with the difficult behavior,” Brianne said.
One of Brianne’s favorite
sessions is Tataya Mato. During that week, kids who are impacted by HIV/AIDS
come from all over to enjoy a fun and worry free week of activities. Many of
the kids who come are faced with a lot of adversity at home and it can be
difficult for them to adjust to the camp environment as well as the counselors.
“Even with that happening, it’s still my favorite week and the most
rewarding,” Brianne said. It’s because of the challenges that these kids face
back at home, it’s one of Brianne’s goals to make it the best week for them.
Now being responsible for training future counselors, she
says that she doesn’t have much free time as CIT Coordinator because most of it
is spent at camp but the friendships she’s made, the doors that have opened for
her and the progress she’s witnessed from many of the kids she’s worked with
makes it well worth it.
“There’s been a lot of like things that camp has giving me
and a lot of opportunities I wouldn’t have gotten if it wasn’t through camp so
being able to come back as a counselor and giving those kids those
opportunities, especially being CIT Coordinator this year, being able to bring
things into the program that I had when I was their age and being that person
for them that my counselors were for me,” Brianne said.
Overall, she says that
Jameson has helped her grow more as a person and has given her skills that can
help her go a long way. “I think I just grown a lot in general, you know
being able to take on more task and be more responsible has been a big factor
as well.” With all of the different roles Brianne has filled, it has definitely
been a learning experience for her. She says her time at Jameson, has taught
her to be more patient and to manage her time more effectively.
With memories, friendships and opportunities she's gained at camp, it's very evident that it's become a big part of her life. When asked if she considered the people here as family, she responded with a smile on her face. "Yes, without a doubt." Through Jameson, she's acquired skills and memories that she can take away with her but hopes to carry on those skills at camp in the future. As a career goal, she plans to eventually work her way up and be a part of Jameson long term.
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
Chase the Singer
We interviewed 10-year-old Chase last week during the Tataya Mato camp. It's a camp that helps children impacted by HIV/AIDS. Chase's grandmother has HIV but he says she's a fighter and will probably live to be at least 90. Apparently somewhere in the family was the singing gene. This is audio of Chase singing one of Michael Jackson's hits...
Monday, July 24, 2017
NPR story
Last week a reporter from our local NPR station stopped by to interview some staff members and a few campers about Jameson Camp.
The story should air soon so be on the lookout! Actually, since it will be on the radio, be on the listen-out.
The story should air soon so be on the lookout! Actually, since it will be on the radio, be on the listen-out.
Friday, July 21, 2017
One Week to Go
This time next week, I'll be preparing for my final day at Jameson Camp. In the meantime, I'll search for the perfect goodbye song that I can use in a self-tribute farewell video.
Thursday, July 20, 2017
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