Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Spiritual Echoes

This message comes from the President of the Lake Geneva M.Y.F. Institute Association as it appeared in THE HI- CAMPER news on July 16 1951

Traditionally each year the question is asked of the campers, " What is your impression of camp?" A number of years ago when I was a camper this same question was asked of me. While I do not remember the answer I gave at that time, I do however remember what impressed me about camp when I first attended.

The scenic setting of the grounds, the beauty and grandeur of the lake, and the wind whispering thru the trees, all helped to create within me the desire to want to be of service to others.

Many Improvements have been made over the years. Old buildings have been rehabilitated, new buildings added and the grounds made more useable. The administration building used to be down on the point. The pier was also at the point as well as the swimming. The chapel was on the hill but it was much smaller than the our present chapel. In place of Magill, there was an old building called Plaza that was on the barracks type. Tent row was really made up of tents. The dinning hall was about half of the present size. I could go on and on about the changes around camp but there is one thing that will never change. God's spirit is ever speaking to the hearts of young people , challenging them to help make this a better world in which to live.

Yes, God's message is the same today as it was years ago. "Seek and ye shall find. Knock and it shall be opened unto you." Now is your opportune time. Take a tip from an old camper and make the most of this week which God has given you.

God has put you in charge of your life. Let God live inside you.

the old album guy don brandeau

Monday, September 10, 2007

Margaret Allen's Reflections

I was one of the people referred to the night of the root beer floats, i.e. "iffy" about coming because I thought I would not know anyone. WRONG. What a treat!!! Seeing folks who had shared my two summers at the camp, plus meeting folks in the "before" and "after" years. Stories shared; memories shared; traditions that passed down through the years. I had so much fun learning things I had not known before, like the old ice house and how cooling was accomplished long before refrigeration.

I'd struggled over this past two years trying to remember those summers, you know. It was a long time ago, and lots of life has happened since, not all of it made up of wise choices. Even when Jim contacted me, all the way from Brazil, I could not dredge up much from the memory banks. Yet, when I stood on the point watching the boats and feeling the breeze, those summers came back very quickly. I remember sitting there with a friend and dreaming the dreams that only the young can dream: of working miracles as a adult, of changing the world, of making a better place in which to raise a child.

I went to the old pump house, wise enough at my age NOT to climb down on its roof, and remembered trying to resolve the turmoil that was part of my world at the time. I stood on the porch of the chapel and thought of the remarkable speaker from the Friends' Meeting camp who changed the way I viewed my part in life's play. I sat with all of you in the ice cream parlor and remembered the shared laughter in the evening, when work was done. I walked past the cottages and remembered our supervisor whose guidance helped me learn a kind of organization to work that I've kept with me through the years (too bad I didn't translate it to home, too).

One of the gifts I received from this gathering of "family" was completely unexpected. You see, from the selfish viewpoint of that adolescent, I'd only seen the turmoil in which my adolescent group lived when we arrived at the camp. As I talked with each of you, heard your stories, sang songs together, and looked at the joined hands etched into the fireplace at Tipi, I began to put the puzzle together. From my dad, who was the oldest attending member, right down to the youngest, I realized that each group of adolescents arrived at the camp at a time of turmoil: depression, post-depression, WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, McCarthy Era, Cold War, Cuban Crisis, Civil Rights Movement. We all were trying to make sense out of a world that seemed, in many ways, senseless; we each faced a future frought with uncertainty, fear, and distrust. Yet, we all managed to learn and grow in this wonderful place, bolstered by the love of joined faiths and shared work/laughter/tears/joy. Each of us, in our own way, went from CPC to make a positive difference in the world, and as a group changed that world for the better.

Friday, August 24, 2007

We begin at the beginning.

The past, our past as Conference Point Camp camp family, has returned to us. Our collective experience can only be shared with future generations. Those who follow after us may never experience what we experienced.

So, we must tell our stories.

This is our beginning-- our reunion.

Thankfully, Conference Point is still with us and majestic as ever but a little faded. But the friendships we made while staffers shall be rekindled through this medium.

So come on, gang! Contribute, chat, edit, write already! Share your memories.

Palaver on!