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His head on my thigh, mine on her torso, another on my stomach. Their warmth radiated and we all shared the heat. There was about twenty of us; all under the stars, packed together on a concrete slab outside of Cabin C. The vast sky had a tinge of indigo scattered through it, signaling dawn was on the horizon. We all laid there, staring up at the speckled sky, our eyes graced with an occasional shooting star that left us all in awe. No matter how many we saw that summer (probably over fifty) we were still enchanted and amazed by the beauty the night sky held.

That summer had only lasted eight weeks, but it was enough to alter my life forever. It was filled with children’s laughter, ticks, swimming on some of the coldest days, wet shoes, complaining children, bucking horses, tears, unfamiliar beetles, riddles, dressing up, many Canada games, Ranchfests, new friendships, and memories that we all will draw upon years from now. Camp Rancho Framasa, settled in the foothills of Brown County, will always have a hold on us and be the reason we have such a link to each other.

We had spent many nights outside while the kids were fast asleep in their bunks. Conversations lasted until four in the morning even though we all knew we would have to be up in less than four hours. We didn’t care. Spending nights outside, listening to the frogs whose freedom was theirs as soon as the sun went down. They no longer had to fear the stomping feet of campers trucking through their terrain. What mattered was that we were together. A community had formed right before our eyes and we did not even realize it.  In a way, we were our own group. A group of kids that didn’t know each other going into these two months of heat.

A group just like I had been in many years ago when I was a camper. But instead of two months, I only had one week to make friendships. Going in alone, knowing no one, that one week of the summer would always be my favorite of those scorching months. I remember meeting new people that always seemed more interesting than myself. I remember playing Gold Rush, sprinting through the forest and avoiding roots at every turn. Those scraped knees never prevented me from making memories that I would hold in the back of my mind. The smell of the trees remained the same and making lanyards never seemed dull. It was simply camp magic.

There was no other way to describe the feeling in my stomach every time my parents took the turn down Clay Lick Road. The songs, the prayers, the people. All of it flooded back in an instant.
I never would have thought as a nineteen year old that I would have such an awakening experience. Connecting old memories with new, under a night sky that should have seemed familiar. Now, it had a new meaning. Stargazing would forever be linked to the many people who had come into my life in a time I so desperately needed it. I was looking for a reason why I was placed on this Earth and those people, those kids, gave me that muse. Things change, plants grow, people learn. All of this was true. Though camp was almost unchanging, eternal.

And as I lay there with the weight of his head on my thigh, comfort surrounded me. No feeling of loneliness crept into my bones. My focus on his laugh, the movement of her stomach on the back of my head as she breathed, the stray arm draped across my knee. We were close, we were bonded; connected by the stars that burned so many miles away. The summer had only been eight weeks, but it had felt like a lifetime.

Taylor Brown
Summer Staff Member, 2019

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My first camp staff Christmas party would have been in December of 1985. I was 17 and the summer of 1985 was the first I spent in my dream job as a summer camp counselor. Back in those days the event was held in the original dining hall. This building was sturdy and filled with history but lacked heat and furniture, sans the camp picnic dining tables. I remember a stinky gas-powered floor heater, where if you stood really close you would experience some warmth but only in the in the smallest of ways. I remember an upside-down pine tree hanging from the rafters that was decorated with a homemade paper chain. I remember a tie-dye t-shirt exchange and huddling together under blankets while trying to play board games. I can’t say for certain which years these things happened only that they were among my first Christmas parties at camp and they often come to my mind when I look back at this incredible time. It is so obvious to me now that these celebrations were so basic, and that I didn’t care. I didn’t care about being cold or any of the other inconveniences. I didn’t care because I was young and in love; I was in love with camp. I had such great friends and a strong sense of belonging that I would have attended the event under any conditions. What they lacked was clearly made up by the shared joy in being together.

I still experience that strong sense of belonging during Christmas time at camp but not only then. The magic of camp happens year-round, we just get to be together in a unique way at Christmas time. It is of course a celebration of the birth of Jesus and his love for us. It is a celebration of the love we have for each other and the love we have for our community. “Camp people” don’t always get to see each other so events like the Christmas party are important to check in on one another and to connect.
By today’s standards the summer camp staff Christmas party is still a basic event. It's not a fancy party. We do have heat and now it is not just for summer staff; all of our staff are invited. The gathering is held in our “new” dining hall (the OPC) and there is a pre-lit fake Christmas tree, a nativity scene and a fire in the fireplace. We make personal pizzas, eat junk food, and play board games. Cell phones are plentiful but mostly for taking pictures and interacting with the staff who couldn’t be there in person. We make ornaments and exchange them with each other. People slumber party in the OPC and polar bear plunge in the freezing pond the next day.

Most importantly we connect just like in 1985, face to face, and we keep the camp love train moving in the right direction.


The true gift for me all these years later is seeing others experience the being “in love with camp…being in love with Jesus… being in love with life.” What a celebration!

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It’s my absolute favorite time of year: Advent!  I love the feeling of anticipation, joy, and even chaos!  There are so many things to accomplish, but we also get the chance to take time for family, tradition, and holiday festivities.  I am so appreciative that there is a specific time in our church year where we are asked to reflect and prepare because there are so many other times in our yearly, or even daily, routine where we aren’t given that chance. 

Camp is given the gift of preparation because what we do changes through the seasons.  The question I get asked all the time is “what does camp do during the winter?”  While it’s true that our programming tends to slow down, we are certainly no less busy.  We get the chance to reflect on what went well for the previous year, what we can improve, and how we can live out our core values of Camper-Centered, Catholic, Humility, Inclusive, Staff Development, and Stewards of the Earth even more.  Because camp operates on a cycle, much like the liturgical year, we get the chance to reflect, reset, and improve on everything from new summer camp programs to new name games. 

With both camp winter and Advent, there’s such a gift of opportunity: the opportunity to try something new, the opportunity to reach out to the people around us and hear what they have to say, the opportunity to be better people.  I’m personally looking forward to taking full advantage of that gift of opportunity in many facets of my life, and am excited to see what goodness comes of it.


Laure Owen
Assistant Camp Director

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The term camp professional doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue of many kids when asked, “what you would like to be when you grow up.” Many people aren’t aware that working in and for camps is a career. The question we are often asked is, “what is your real job or when will you get a real job.”  It is OK, people just don’t understand especially if they haven’t had a camp experience that has changed their life. Camp is pretty real to me and all of my colleagues. Some aspects of working at a camp full time are very businesslike. We have budgets, we hire staff and we market our product which is a camp experience. It is not always easy as we have ups and downs, good years and bad years.  
 
I am pretty confident though that many of us do not get into the camping business for the business parts, maybe some do but more often I think we are in it for the people and for the opportunity to change lives. Often, we work in the spirit of giving back because our lives were changed at camp. We know camps help people to grow and unfold into who they are meant to be. We know a camp experience can bring out the best in people.
 
I find this also true for our summer camp staff  and our school year program staff. These young staff members come back year after year, sometimes stealing one last summer or semester before moving on to what most of the world calls a real job to have just  one more opportunity to change a kids life.  
 
Check out this post from just last week by one of our Program Staff--
 
“I spent today with a group of inner-city high school Freshmen. They were at camp for a day retreat. Usually I expect freshmen to be “too cool” to answer questions, but instead I got that and so much more. For only 5 hours together they asked me deep questions, I shared prayer experiences, we played team building activities “games.”
At one point I asked “questions? Comments? Concerns? Fun facts?”
A girl shot her hand up in the air: “I have a fun fact...well it’s more of a statement...I really thought today was going to be lame, but It’s actually pretty fun.”
Another girl: “your jokes aren’t funny”
Groups like this, honest and open to grow, are my favorite. This stuff never gets old.”
---Kristy Hamilton, Program Staff
 
It is true that camp offers one of a kind experiences that change lives and those of us whom are lucky enough to work at a camp have are truly blessed to help make that happen. And that is about as real as it gets to me.
 
Angi K Sullivan
Camp Co-director

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Whenever I get the chance to interview a prospective counselor, I enjoy getting the chance to tell them about camp.  It’s a huge responsibility and an incredible opportunity to work at camp.  I never miss the opportunity to let these interviewees know that a camp counselor is what I have always considered an Automatically Cool Person.  There is nothing else in the interview that brings so many tilted heads and barely concealed confusion.  But it’s absolutely true: a camp counselor is automatically cool in the eyes of their campers.  Just think, a camp counselor is an adult, but they’re a fun adult.  Adults don’t usually wear tie-dye five days a week, or sing the Weewee song with operatic intensity, or dance to Send Me on My Way while wearing a tutu, but camp counselors do. 

I think often about my camp counselors and what I loved about them.  They were funny, they were compassionate, they wore silly clothes like they were the most fashionable outfits in the world.  They answered our questions, they learned about our lives, they immediately welcomed us and waved goodbye.  I can’t remember an exact moment when I knew my counselor was cool, but I know that I left camp at the end of the week wanting nothing more than to be a camp counselor. 

Not only can camp counselors be silly and funny and loud, but they care.  They make their campers feel heard and understood.  They model healthy friendships.  They encourage self-care and good hygiene.  Most importantly, their job is to encourage, rather than deny.  In a world where there are so many expectations that kids are expected to meet, how great is it that camp counselors give them the chance to just be themselves?  We often talk about how we could hold camp in a parking lot, and I know that it’s absolutely true.  Take away the activities, the cabins, the creek, the games, and camp is still camp because of the people that are there.  Being an Automatically Cool Person gives you the chance to be a role model, to show everyone that you can be accepted just by being yourself.

Lauren Owen
Assistant Camp Director

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The camp experience begins with a registration.  After registration comes packing, and then travel and of course arrival! Most who arrive at camp are at least a little bit nervous as camp can be a bit of a mystery and when it is someone’s first time there a lot of unknowns including the food, the grounds, and the people. The friendly, smiling faces of camp staff upon arrival helps folks begin to warm up and settle in for the experience which can include games, archery, high ropes, low ropes, hikes, crafts, classes, boating, campfires, Mass, and more. All which are participated in and accomplished without technology.

But… It almost doesn’t matter (almost) what activities or program you’ve come to camp to experience because honestly it is the connective pieces, of faith, fun, kindness, conversation, nature, laughter, and prayer, that make the experience. I recently heard a staff member say, “Technology cannot give you all of this” as he looked out into the trees.

As a 32 year “camp person” I’ve been privileged to be a part of so many of those connective pieces, and I know in our changing world where technology is at the forefront of our lives, that a camp experience is more important than ever.

The proof for me is in the experience…

I’ve experienced the smiles and the laughter. I’ve heard the songs being loudly and expressively sung. I have sat in the middle of the woods with a group of kids for no reason other than to listen in to the natural world and I have watched them be wowed. I have experienced moments of deep faith and grace. I have walked along side a camper on a horse who are working hard to overcome a fear. I have answered questions from overwhelmed and scared parents. I’ve hugged a homesick summer camper who I know can make it until check-out, even though she’s not sure. I have had the immense pleasure of watching 70 college age staff pull the thread through the moments of summer camp to make a week the best week of the summer for many, many hundreds of children. I have equally been awed by school year program staff who do it all in one day…food service, clean, facilitate activities, get kids to think and make them laugh, and smile through it all. None of this required my phone or the internet. It only required me to show up, be present, and hold the space for the experience to happen.   

It is true that the activities and programs bring us together but once together the less tangible takes over and makes the real impact which links us to God, one another and meaning in this chaotic world.

Angi K Sullivan
Camp Co-director


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Fall is my absolute favorite time of year.  I love everything about it: the cooler weather, the sweaters, the leaves, the apple cider.  And I especially love fall at camp.  Camp becomes less and less green and more and more red, yellow, orange, maroon, brown, and gold.  One of the reasons I love camp in the fall so much is that it reminds me of my first time coming to CYO Camp when I was a little girl.
Way back when I was in third grade, I was invited to go to fall camp at Camp Rancho Framasa with one of my best friends.  I had never been to an overnight camp before, just day camp at the Girl Scout camp by my house with my Brownie troop.  But I loved being outside, and I thought CYO Camp sounded so cool and different.  So, my mom loaded up the car with our stuff, and we made the drive down Clay Lick Road for the first time, back when it was still a gravel road.  Trees lined the road, just like they do now, and we past the horse pasture and the Canada Game field.  We checked in and walked up to our cabin, and both of us immediately claimed a top bunk.  I hugged my mom goodbye and once our whole group was together we got to go to dinner.
I don’t know if everyone remembers their first meal at CYO Camp, but I wouldn’t be surprised if you did.  It’s a sensory explosion.  Bright colors from the hundreds of people, smells of food coming from the kitchen, and the overwhelming, deafening sound of laughter, talking, singing, and challenging.  Back before the “Challenge” sign was used, you had to be ready for challenges the moment you stepped into he OPC.  And me, being eight years old and knowing nothing, had to catch on really quick.  But the songs were funny and we were never allowed to stand on the benches in the cafeteria, so it felt special and extra adventurous.  And plus, the counselors were doing it!  These were adults, but they were cool adults, and you could tell they were cool adults because they wore tie dye shirts and had dozens of friendship bracelets on their wrists and sang louder and danced harder than everyone else at their table.
So after dinner, we played the evening game.  We got to run through the woods!  We charged through the fallen leaves and followed the beams of our flashlights and if no one had sounded the horn we probably would have just kept playing for hours.  And that game, that was the start of an absolute whirlwind of fun.  Campfires and horses, lanyards and pumpkin carving, hopping and fort building, telling stories and yelling the Great Amen, braiding hair and earning our bead.  I had never before been in a place that felt like it was designed specifically for me to have fun. 
My best friend’s mom picked us up from camp at the end of the session, and she never had to prompt us with any questions.  We talked, we burst out laughing from inside jokes, we showed off our lanyards and our shirts and the new songs we had learned.  We had an hour and a half-long car ride to figure out how to tell her why we had such an amazing time, but we just couldn’t quite put our fingers on it.  After that, I had to go back to school where we didn’t sing songs on the cafeteria benches, and back to class where we sat a lot and needed to be quiet a lot.  It felt like camp was my special secret, like I had gotten to visit this dream land where everything was always fun and everyone got to be silly and laugh until their sides hurt. 
And now, years and years later, I still feel that way about camp.  I love getting to be just one person in the generations of amazing staff that make camp a magical place.  I love watching our campers jump in the leaves and wear their adorable rain boots and laugh and sing as much as their lungs will allow.  There is nothing quite like fall in Brown County, and there’s no place that exemplifies fall in Brown County quite like CYO Camp.

Lauren Owen
Assistant Camp Director
CYO Camp Rancho Framasa


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I have long been a word lover. Reading and writing are favorite pastimes. Part of this love includes being on the lookout for words of wisdom to support or challenge my views. It is in connection with words that I find meaning. It is in that connection that I also seek a sense of validation for the camp work I am involved in AND to find the places my camp work can grow. The words that people share about their experiences are powerful messages of when we get it right and when we miss the mark.  So, it is no coincidence that I excitedly open each and every feedback form that makes its way to my camp inbox. I want to know what people are saying about camp, yes, even the criticism. I want to know it all. This fall we have been honored to hold space and outdoor programs for some pretty amazing folks. It has been mostly good news from them but also some ideas for us to grow into. Here is a sampling of their words about their camp experience.

“We all had a great time! Your grounds are very meticulously kept. The nature all around is incredibly beautiful. We LOVED the Sacred Heart of Jesus statue, as well as our Blessed Mother statues and stations of the cross. We were thrilled to have no cell phone coverage. We were able to really refocus on what is really important to us: our Faith and our family. Love and Support. Eliminating technology and making real memories is a blessing to us. We are so thankful for the weekend. We were also really impressed with the food selection--it was very healthy and nutritious. We really hope to return and make it a tradition!”

“One of our best year's yet. The kids got so much from the experience!”

“If I could change one thing about CYO Camp it would be: I know this is probably unavoidable, but I would say consistency. I find the retreat offered depends so much on the team of leaders. Some years they've been great, some years it's half and half. The activities are also led differently based on what leader/counselor you have. I know everyone has their own gifts/passions, so they aren't going to all do things the same, and there's beauty in that. Sometimes though I wish it could be more consistent across this board. This time around, two of the leaders actually switched groups so they could lead the activity they were more comfortable with. I appreciated that, because I felt like they were trying to use their gifts in the area that was best for them, and therefore was best for the kids.”

“This was my first time at this particular camp, and I was impressed with how engaged you kept all of our kids from beginning to end.”

I have such gratitude for those who take the time to fill out feedback forms. Words shared in this format become a part of the conversation about how best to live out our core values and to serve in a way that is pleasing to others and to God.

A few additional words to close with…
 “The highest reward that God gives us for good work is the ability to do better work.”  Elbert Hubbard

In peace.
Angi K Sullivan
Camp Co-director


 
 

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As the program director for the Adventure program, I often have to ask myself the question “is this actually something adventurous?”  Whether it’s considering where we camp, the activities we do, the way we build our Adventure community, I feel an obligation to have this program live up to its name.  Something that can be challenging physically and emotionally, but also allows for beautiful moments of personal achievement and pride.  In my mind, the cave is the perfect Adventure activity.
 
CYO Camp has been visiting “our” cave since the 1990s, a location that I frequently describe as “drive to the middle of nowhere, and then turn right.”  It’s a wonderfully secluded part of the southern Indiana landscape and a place that I would imagine very few people even know about.  And we get the opportunity to take campers there every single week during the summer.  
 
I would argue that there is no other place, at least in Indiana, as otherworldly as the cave.  At no other point in my life have I found myself crawling, rolling, and walking through dusty tunnels lit only by our collective headlamps.  At no other outdoor experience have I been able to experience total darkness, and near-silence so overwhelming that I could hear the sound of my own heartbeat.  
 
The cave is one of the places where I experience God most intimately.  I witness God in the incredible underground landscape that we get to explore, in our campers supporting each other in the most uncomfortable points, in the way the beams of our headlamps bounce off the shiny quartz ceilings and the newly forming stalactites.  And there’s one other spot where I acutely feel God’s presence.  As our eyes adjust to the darkness as we descend into the cave, they focus more on shape and movement more than color, so in the cave colorful things like shirts become muted into what are mostly hues of brown and gray.  But then, as we leave the cave, our eyes are so used to the darkness that they then have to readjust to the light.  We walk out with our eyes down, wanting to protect ourselves from the blinding day.  And then, you see the tiniest shade of green, and you get to look up.  Above you, you are met by the greenest forest you’ve ever seen.  Sure, it’s the same forest you left mere hours ago, but now the shades are more vivid and bright.  The dirt that now coats almost the entirety of our bodies isn’t just grayish-brown, it’s a warm red-orange-brown, the proof of what we’ve just undertaken.
 
I can’t think of a better way to begin our Adventure week, honestly.  The cave is the perfect experience to push limits, build community, try something new, and see God in a new way.

Lauren Owen, Program & Development Assistant


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Asher is a long time camper who has autism. What is noticeable about Asher is that he wanders and very rarely hangs out with the other kids in his group. He always seems happy enough with his one to one counselor and a bit of redirection. His experience is “inclusive enough.” Then, Bill enters the picture; Bill totally gets Asher which is evident by how Asher loves to tell Bill jokes. It is even clearer one afternoon when Asher is again wandering. His group is playing basketball and he is not into it. His preferred activity? Cloud watching. He wandered just a little way away and found a grassy, soft spot to lay down and stare up at the sky.

His one to one counselor, Bill, could have told Asher to get up and to come play, he could have told Asher that it is time for basketball but instead he lay on the ground next to Asher and asked him what he saw. It seemed pretty uneventful for Asher; he was just being Asher, but the other campers and counselors noticed and one by one they lay on the ground as well and some pretty cool observations were made and chatted about. All of sudden Asher was a part of something that he created and that others could be included.

Kudos to Bill for embracing this moment as this was the beginning of something significant for Asher and for the others as the boys now had common ground, a connection, a place to begin a friendship. Asher was no longer the boy who didn’t stay with the group; he was now the boy who saw dinosaurs and monster trucks in the clouds and when you are an 11 year old boy that is pretty darn cool.

This is one of our stories that encapsulate the meaning of inclusive programming at camp. While we have support and adaptions at the ready it really is the individual person and his or her approach to a child or a group of children that brings the nature of inclusion alive. Bill chose to create an environment of inclusion. He chose the activity that brought everyone in. It was not just about Asher. It was about supporting the group about bringing them together.

Yes, at camp we are known for our support and inclusion of people who have disabilities or specific diagnosis like Asher and it is quite a beautiful thing however we don’t consider that the full story. Our inclusive core value is about everyone. It is about the sense of belonging felt at camp. It is about allowing people to show up and be themselves and yes, sometimes, people need support. The truth is we all need support sometimes. Camp embraces this idea and provides an environment of inclusiveness whether a person has a disability or not. It is one of the core values that make camp, camp.

Asher still comes to camp; he is 14 now. He has become kinda known for his quirky sense of humor. He makes people laugh and not just his one to one counselor. He  stays with his group a bit more these days, often on the edge of the activity but camp is home to him. He knows he is welcome and he can be himself.

Angi K Sullivan
CYO Camp Co-Director
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Camp Staff

Camp is such an unique experience! Our staff take turns sharing their perspectives of the experience that is CYO Camp Rancho Framasa! 

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