Camp Woodland Blog

Camp: A Different Kind of Mindset

Posted by on July 8, 2025

What is different about camp now that we are over 2 weeks in?

It’s easy these days to sense that something special is happening at camp. As the season has “matured” a bit, it’s even more apparent. By “matured” we mean there’s a greater sense of ease in the air, a feeling of relaxing into the rhythms of camp life, a normalizing of sorts. The girls have made more friends, opened up to the new experiences offered in the activities, and become more comfortable in our rustic outdoor environment. They’ve begun to feel included, treated with kindness and respect, brought closer by a community spirit that’s enthusiastic and supportive. As they become more familiar with camp, their confidence has grown tremendously. They’ve adopted a “camp mindset” of sorts, a way of being that develops when surrounded by all these wonderful qualities.

This maturing, however, takes some time. It takes a few weeks to settle in and acclimate to camp life. When they first arrive at camp, girls are generally more hesitant. They’re usually a little nervous about their place in the group and how they’ll do away from home. Even for seasoned campers, there’s a different mindset that takes a few days to fade.

Could it be a transition from a school to a camp mindset?

Maybe we can attribute this to school? Perhaps these campers are arriving with a “school mindset,” a way of thinking, or a collection of assumptions that’s clashing with what camp represents. As you know, for many kids, school can be a grind, something that requires careful steps, regular effort with competitive undertones, and often includes guarded engagement out of a fear of peer judgment. It requires a great deal of individual work, pressures to perform, and evaluations. While there may be certain legitimate educational goals this mindset serves, it can also be a burden.

With school occupying so much of their lives, it’s no wonder girls arrive at camp a little out of sorts. They’re immersed in the world in ways that don’t apply at camp. In a way, this is the project of camp— to unwind some of the habits and assumptions that are inevitable from spending so much time at school, to encourage a more genuine, playful and joyful approach. Camp is a form of relief. It’s why we have so many campers return year after year.

Will you notice a difference?

We might be running around camp searching for aliens. We might be jousting each other with fun noodles on the balance beam. We might be taking a trail ride through the Climax Forest, or just floating on the lake in a tube. In all these activities and more— throughout our days— we’re building a “camp mindset,” a way of authentic connection, a freedom to explore, and a lightness everyone finds refreshing.

When you reunite with your camper/s in August, we are pretty sure you’ll notice this change. In addition to the memories of camp being fun, and the many friendships they’ve made, our hope is that your girls will return home carrying their camp mindset with them. And while the pressures of school will inevitably creep back in, we hope they can move through the world with more camp confidence, camp values, and Woodland spirit.

Reference: RBC