Helping Children Thrive
Last week I enjoyed the opportunity to replace "no" with "know." My daughter and I took our annual trip to Camp Paradise, a father-daughter event at a rustic facility deep in the heart of Michigan's Upper Peninsula. The word rustic means no running water and no electricity. Yes, quite a challenge to go without two out of the big three needs in life. Fortunately, they provide a consistent supply of coffee—the third big need—which makes the experience extremely doable. Even when you consider the living quarters. Our modest, one-room cabin housed five 12-year-old daughters in top bunks, five snoring dads in bottom bunks, an outhouse 50 yards away, and enough mosquitoes to qualify as a plague. And we considered it all joy. Our cabin ate together, played together, swam together, talked together, snored together, adventured together, and together learned that life without electricity and water faucets works just fine. The coffee for dads helps a lot. Throughout four nights of eating, playing, swimming, talking, snoring, adventuring, and learning, I began to really know each girl. To understand who God made inside each of these young ladies. I discovered the potential to focus more on people when you care less about time. I concluded that exuberance for keeping a schedule stands as a frequent reason behind the word "no." Amazing, it seems, at how relaxed everyone feels when cell phone signals don't exist, iPods remain at home, and email is not an option. Our daughters competed with nothing for our notice, other than the mosquitoes. Children thrive when they sense your undivided attention. And amidst their thriving, I learned to appreciate each girl for her uniqueness:
Fortunately, the camp experience includes a designated opportunity to share these observations with each girl. Should've seen their eyes light up when the dads spoke these and many other words of affirmation. Okay, let's start application time. |



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