Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Redemption

I recently returned from a week at children's camp. Allow me to sum up my experience via a little arithmetic. 6 black kids + 9 white kids + a duffel bag full of pharmaceuticals + 2 bed wetters + 2 fans + a quiver full of poorly aimed arrows + a snake that may have been an extension chord = Deer cabin 2010. With the race issue alone, there was drama from the get-go. There were times when I honestly wondered if I was at kids camp or playing a bit part in the prequel to the Longest Yard. Rocks were thrown. Words were exchanged. Tears were shed. And that was just among the counselors. Despite the apparent anarchy, we tried everything we could to salvage the week. Laying on of hands. Sad music and altar calls. Eloquent expositions on the harmony of the created order. Yet each new attempt to right the ship was ultimately dashed upon the same rocks that had heretofore been used as weapons.

When the sun rose on Friday morning, we had but one chance. One measly opportunity to rescue this week in the woods from the proverbial bowels of pointlessness. That one chance was the infamous Camp Relay. For those of you unacquainted with this ancient right of passage, the Camp Relay is a five-minute free-for-all across the campground that pits cabin against a cabin in a series of athletic feats. It demands an unbroken string of perfection, and a diverse array of skill-sets. As the race began that day, most leaders cheered their campers on with the predictable chants of " do your best", and " we're all in this together." We were slightly more ambitious. I personally ran the full gauntlet, screaming " for this you were created" into the pre-adolescent ears of my campers. It just so happened that it was our day. For one moment, we somehow managed to take all of the competitiveness, animosity, and malice and direct it squarely where it belonged....in the direction of 100 and some unsuspecting church kids. Wesley Kelly's dizziness- defying performance on the bat-spin was unprecedented. The three-legged race was as graceful as a fresh foal galloping over the green hills of eastern Kentucky. Don't even get me started on the leap-frog.

Well before the last leg was completed, the celebration had already begun. As we hoisted our fifty-pound bifocled bed wetter into the air, the entire week was brought into perspective. Five days of treachery were made right as we received first prize. What was the prize? All the corn dogs we could eat and a fresh mattress for bunk #5. Sweet justice.

8 comments:

Timothy said...

I actually laughed out loud throughout this. "FOR THIS YOU WERE CREATED!"

Michael J said...

that's what i call good coaching...dean smith would be proud

Matt said...

If I should ever have some part of my life chronicled, you, Joshua LeRoy, shall be my first call. I laughed far too often and too loud for it to be appropriate at work. I think trying to play it off like I was crying would be far worse though.

Scooper said...

Hey! Matt's sister here. He told me I had to come over and have a read. The "50-lb bespeckled bed wetter" is my fave. : ) Your chronicle reminds me of why I have never been actively involved in children's or youth ministry. Being a mother of 3 is plenty...and they are all of the same race and blood-line. Kudos for surviving and living to write about it. We are all better for it. : )

Anonymous said...

Third member of the Rampey family chiming in here . . . laughing as I type! Your chronicling of "seed-planting" (hopefully to be harvested by you or someone else before the end of the age) had me doubled over with laughter. Would love to read what your campers would write (should they perchance give it a try) about the whole experience! Way to go, Josh. You did it . . . and lived to tell about it, and we are the better for it (or at least you brought some intense laughter to our mid-afternoon)!

Miss Joan

Jaclyn said...

Matt sent me, too. I think we did meet once at a camp in North Carolina. I was the groupie with Paradigm 5 who I'm sure you don't remember.
Anyway, thanks for the great read! Very creative.

Tom Harding said...

Hilarious my friend! Thanks for taking the time to write it. Made my day. Well done.

Dustin Wilson said...

That is awesome bro! Had me laughing through a lot of it. Keep up the great work.