Do you ever wish you could go back and do things over?
Sometimes you might want to have a redo. Other times it might be because it was such a wonderful experience that you’d like to enjoy it all over again. This past weekend someone told me that there is a fad now saying that your life is defined by what song was #1 on your 14th birthday. (Mine, by the way, was “I’ll Be There.” I can’t tell you how much I love that!) Of course, the second I heard that I was fourteen again in my mind.
The years that marked my time between Jr High and High School were spent in North Carolina. I was a butterfly desperately trying to get out of her cocoon. I didn’t have confidence and honestly I feel most of that could have been changed with the help of teachers in my life that encouraged and mentored me instead of humiliated me….yeah, Jr. High was rough….
But then we moved back to Kinston. I loved Kinston. I loved my grandfather, Pop. We would walk together and he would tell me stories and listen to me and sometimes we would just be. (For more on my grandfather our next season will contain a play about a portion of his life. Look for it in the fall of 2019, “I Remember Pop”) Pop would listen to me and most of the time help me discover what we really important. I always felt like I could achieve and do something that mattered when I was around him.
Flash forward to those days I would wander into the back of the local high school theater. (a school I didn’t attend. For more on that read: https://fromthewings.org/2018/04/20/by-no-stretch-of-the-imagination/) The drama teacher stopped me and asked me why I was watching instead of participating. He then told me that he directed a theater group in the summer and he would love for me to get involved. As you know from the other post, I did. Throughout that summer my life changed. I gained such confidence. The confidence to try new things. The confidence to speak up. I also began to gain skill as the rehearsals involved singing and dancing. I loved every moment.

Next week, our first summer camp of 2018 begins. (By the way, we still have four spots left! Come join us! overshadowed.org ) Why do we have camps? It’s not to make money. It’s for a list of reasons:
- To provide an affordable theatrical experience. We learn everything in two weeks. We have auditions on the first day and teach and intensely rehearse for the next days until the three performances complete with costumes and set are performed the following week. What a rush!
- To teach. To help students to find new skills and hone the ones they all ready have.
- To provide a safe environment. We do not ask anyone to wear clothes or do something on stage that they might not be comfortable with.
- To encourage. (We are all in this together!)
- To change lives. Simply put, I believe the aspect of putting a play together in this short amount of time unifies the cast in ways that are unexplainable. I believe that our team of directors really care about the student more than the production and that we work to make each person feel important.
During that summer of community theatre someone asked me why I blushed so much. I couldn’t answer him because I was too embarrassed to get the words out. His reply, “My goal this summer is to get you to be able to speak confidently. The best gift God gives us is our speech. You ought to be able to use it effectively.”
I have held on to that life changing concept. That. Simply that. Is WHY.
If you are in theater, please remember the power you have. But it’s a good reminder for all of us I believe.
Do you have a story about the power of theater? Or speech? Or camp? Please take a moment to share it with us!
Until next time,
Reba
So true! What great joy it is watching a young person’s gift emerge out of the cocoon; such a privilege to be part of the process:)
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Thank you, Susan, for all you do!
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