Making Invisible Kids Visible

Being invisible is pretty hard for a kid. Crummy childhoods take many forms; usually, it’s an amalgam of yuck. Smacks and screams thankfully have a time limit, but neglect is the gift that never stops.

Even the most benign neglect—like being a latchkey kid—can foster loneliness.

When trouble fills a family, kids are pushed to the background. I lived in a land of my own, imagining my real parents (President Kennedy and Jackie, FYI) had left me to fend for myself, testing a ‘cream will rise to the top’ theory. (A theory still to be tested.)

Meanwhile, by nine, my beleaguered sister was trying her sullen best to cook me supper.

If it hadn’t been for the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies, I doubt my sister and I could have ended up strong in the broken places. Our mom was a struggling single mother who did her very best. Our dad suffered in ways we’ll never understand, papering his sadness with drugs and dying at thirty-six.

But we had the summer! Through the magical generosity of the Federation, we spent our summers at Camp Mikan, our paradise. We boarded a bus somewhere in Manhattan’s Lower East Side at the Lillian Wald House and emerged from the bus blinking in the sunlight and breathing the sweet green air of Harriman State Park. Sunshine! Swimming! Friends!

Visibility!

In my memory, we underwent a Wizard of Oz transition from black and white to color. At camp, we went from unnoticed to the coolness of being all summer campers. My sister became a big shot, a member of an envied clique, moving up the ranks of the camp hierarchy until, eventually, she was head of the waterfront (only the coolest job in the world.) I became part of a pack of safely rebellious friends who kept me going through the lonely winters.

We got to be kids.

I starred in Guys and Dolls.

Jill gathered groupies!

We hiked, canoed, and short-sheeted counselors. Married head counselors Frenchy and Danny taught me I could be lovable, and through loving them, I learned early on that interracial marriage was a non-issue. Luke Bragg taught me to get up on stage, and from being with him, through osmosis, I learned that gay or straight made no difference.

We got to be kids.

Women ran Mikan. They taught Jill and me that women were strong, loving, firm, and trustworthy. They taught us that it was possible to be protected in this world.

Back home, we were once again invisible and quiet children cleaning the house, uncomplaining and obedient, waiting for the year to pass so we could again have a childhood.

Then summer came, and once more, we could swim, sing, mold clay, hit a ball, learn folk dance (I can still dance the Miserlou Greek dance in my mind), and unclench from being coiled watchers.)

Doris Bedell, who ran the camp, shaped our lives more than she’d ever imagined. She loved us, scolded us, and made us feel seen. She probably helped my sister become the best teacher in Brooklyn. Her memory stayed with me when I ran a camp and community center in Boston.

Summer can save a kid. One person can offer a child enough hope to hang on. Think about this as we get ready to slide into school vacation.

One adult can change a child’s world.

Remember this.

Think of who you can touch.

Thank you, Federation of Jewish Philanthropies. Thank you for my childhood.

The above words were written in 2010. In 2014, I was honored to have been chosen as the Women’s Philanthropy 4th Annual One Book Read of the Greater Boston Combined Jewish Philanthropies. As I look back, none of this, including all my published novels, feels real. One thing that happens when your past is a bit off the rails is that the present never seems quite true.

Today I am happy–lucky to have a family I love, work I love, and a love of my life who I love. There’s a whole lot of loving going on. But the isolated girl from above lives on. (Isn’t that always the way?) So, I pay it forward, donating so other girls and boys can attend a great camp where they will flourish.

Find the place where your dreams did or could have come true.