This past week I was one of six storytellers at The Hearth, a periodic storytelling event in Grants Pass, Oregon. The theme was family secrets. My story was titled "Poisoned Secrets" and contained two tales from my childhood about secrets born of shame and fear.
Part 1: Camp Highland
When I was eight years old, I spent two weeks at Camp Highland, a YWCA camp for girls in north Georgia. It was my first time away from home.
Everything should have been fine. I was a happy, well-adjusted child; the camp wasn't far from my home in Sandy Springs, Georgia, and my older sister was also at the camp, although she lived in another cabin and had her own set of friends and camp activities.
But I liked the crafts classes, swimming in the lake, the campfire sing-alongs. I liked learning how to canoe, how to climb back into the canoe if I fell out, and especially how to stand on the gunwales in the stern and, by bending my knees and swinging my arms, propel myself across the water. It was called gunwaling, and it was a lot of fun.
But I was so unhappy! I know now that I was just homesick. I missed my parents, of course, but mostly, I think, I just missed home, the familiarity of home—my dolls, my cat, the woods I played in, the room I shared with my sister. I missed reading a book in the Red Chair, swinging in the Big Swing over the tops of the dogwood trees, climbing the mimosa tree, riding my bicycle on the circular driveway around the well. I missed all these things with a deep, acute longing, an ache that couldn't be eased by new friends and fun activities. And because I was afraid of being called a baby by the other girls or of being sent home as a failure by the camp counselors, I didn't tell anyone how unhappy I was. Loneliness compounded homesickness.
I was taking tennis lessons, too. I liked tennis. I had never played before, and neither had the other girls in the class, so, of course, our balls frequently went out of bounds, often landing in the poison ivy that grew lushly around the edges of the court. I was highly allergic to poison ivy, so, of course, I was always very careful when I had to retrieve a stray ball, reaching for it with my tennis racket to urge it back into the clear.
Usually I was careful.
One day I wasn't.
It was a day of particularly bad homesickness, of loneliness and ache and misery, and—here's the secret I've never told anyone before tonight—I waded deliberately into the poison ivy to retrieve a tennis ball, making sure the poisonous leaves made good contact with my skin.
Well—I came down with the worst case of poison ivy you can imagine. I had good reason to be miserable now!
There was talk of sending me home or even to the hospital, but in the end the camp nurse did a good enough job of keeping the reaction at bay, with calamine lotion and gloves on my hands at night, that I could finish my two weeks at camp.
When camp was over and my parents came to pick me up, I was badly affected by the poison ivy. My arms, legs, and ankles were covered with oozing blisters, an angry red rash, and spots of pink calamine lotion. I was a mess! My parents were shocked.
When I saw my parents, I started crying. I cried for how unhappy I had been, for the shame of my disfigured body, and, especially, for the shame of knowing, deep down where I couldn't admit it, that I had brought this on myself.
I know now that it was a way of evoking sympathy for my unhappiness, of saying, "I am so unhappy! I miss my home so much!" Not that I expected to be sent home or even that that's what I wanted, but that I desperately needed to make visible my misery. I was too ashamed to admit this to my parents, and I have kept it a secret all these years.