The Columbus Dispatch

Moms share kids’ letters from camp

- By Beth Whitehouse Newsday

Last summer, in the midst of her seven weeks at a Pennsylvan­ia sleepaway camp, Ilana Yunis’ 9-yearold daughter, Serena, wrote a letter home that said something like, “I hate it here. How could you send me here?”

Yunis jokes that she “needed a horse tranquiliz­er” after receiving the letter.

“Out of the blue, she sent me this incredibly, horrifying­ly sad homesick letter,” said Yunis, 40, a lawyer in Manhattan.

Yunis commiserat­ed with her older sister, Aliza Licht, 45, a marketing consultant and author from Manhattan. The sisters attended that same sleepaway camp when they were girls, and Licht also had a daughter, Sabrina, now 11, at the camp. Licht’s response? “Why don’t we start an Instagram account and post these letters? I’m sure we’re

not alone.”

And so the Homesickdo­tcom Instagram account was born — it now has more than 100 funny or poignant letters from campers submitted by their parents. Yunis and Licht screen the letters and redact all the identifyin­g informatio­n before adding them to the collection, in the children’s original handwritin­g, misspellin­gs and all.

“Mommy, you prosimed me I will like my consler’s! And I hate all of them!” reads one. “Dear Mom & Dad, How are You? I am in hell,” reads another. A third reads, “Dear Mommy, I know you already payed for 7 weeks, but I want to come home.” Still

another circled a spot on the letter and wrote, “This is a teardrop.”

Not all the letters are only about homesickne­ss. One writer chastised his parents for not writing enough: “I have 4 letters this year I’m so mad. You hear me everyone else has 10,” the camper wrote. Another asked for medical advice: “My counsler Jason got scrached by a skunk before camp started and now the skin fell off and the tissue of his musle is showing. Should he go to the health center?”

The posted letters are meant to be entertaini­ng. Parents can laugh at the letters because they know they are very much written in the moment and that kids usually bounce back quickly from their moments of missing parents, the sisters said.

Stacy Menikoff, 40,

of Plainview, New York, says she found out about the account, which now has close to 2,000 followers, because her daughter, Blair, 10, is in Sabrina’s bunk at camp.

“It’s the funniest thing ever,” Menikoff said. “I think it’s realistic for parents who have children at sleepaway camp.”

So did Yunis pick her daughter up last summer after she got the missive? Of course not, she said.

“It’s a huge luxury and a privilege,” Yunis said of the sleepaway camp experience. “It’s teaching the kid independen­ce and coping skills. I told her, ‘You’re going to feel amazing at the end of the day that you did it.’”

She did, however, consider sending Serena to camp without any stamps this summer.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States