Welcome back to Just Breathe and if you're here for the first time, I'm so glad you're here.
Heather HesterThis is a space where you can be exactly where you are in your process.
Heather HesterNo judgment is allowed, only curiosity and self compassion.
Heather HesterI had breakfast this morning with a very dear friend who reminded me the value of having a place to come to where you can learn or feel validated in whatever feelings you may be having or just be.
Heather HesterI think we often forget the importance and benefits of just taking a moment to breathe, to sit in discomfort or contemplation or feel all the feelings that we're having.
Heather HesterI invite you to take this time for whatever you need right now as you breathe and allow.
Heather HesterI want to share a little background on today's guest.
Heather HesterAdam Simon is the Executive Director of Odyssey Teen Camp.
Heather HesterEvery summer, OTC welcomes around 330 teenagers, 80% of whom identify as LGBTQIA, with the large majority of them being on some kind of gender journey.
Heather HesterOTC did not start out that way, but over time it has organically grown into a beautiful welcoming space allowing teens to just be themselves.
Heather HesterEven though today the large majority of the camp identifies as lgbtqia, that has only been the case for the last three or four years.
Heather HesterAdam says, I think we are pretty much the same wacky camp we have always been.
Heather HesterThe kids are still insecure, creative, sensitive, wonderful, sometimes struggling, funny teens that have been coming to camp for over 20 years.
Heather HesterThey are just bending or breaking every gender stereotype out there.
Heather HesterThe minute that many teens come to our camp, they look around and cannot believe their eyes when they see everyone is queer like they are.
Heather HesterI think that alone can be life changing.
Heather HesterThey recognize that not only are they not alone, but there is absolutely no nothing wrong with them.
Heather HesterAs always, I will include all the ways you can reach out to Adam and learn more about Odyssey Teen Camp in the show notes and on my website.
Heather HesterI have a feeling that you, like me, will be touched and engaged by Adam's vulnerability and compassion and so very grateful that he has created such a beautiful space for our kids.
Heather HesterWelcome to Just Breathe Parenting youg LGBTQ Team, the podcast transforming the conversation around loving and raising an LGBTQ child.
Heather HesterMy name is Heather Hester and I am so grateful you are here.
Heather HesterI want you to take a deep breath and know that for the time we are together, you are in the safety of the Just Breathe Nest.
Heather HesterWhether today's show is an amazing guest or me sharing stories, resources, strategies, or lessons I've learned along our journey, I want you to feel like we're just hanging out at a coffee shop having a cozy chat.
Heather HesterMost of all, I want you to remember that wherever you are on this journey right now, in this moment in time, you are not alone.
Guest 1Let's see what we can do in that time and then, you know, go from there.
Guest 2I listened to one with where you had a panel of three people talking about non binary and it was interesting.
Guest 2You didn't talk too much.
Guest 2They talked a lot, but it was, you know.
Guest 1Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Guest 1I didn't talk.
Guest 1I don't know that I talked at all.
Guest 1That was, that was so much fun.
Guest 1That was.
Guest 1That panel took me like eight months to get pulled together, like to get a day that worked for everybody.
Guest 1And I really wanted the daughter of that lady.
Guest 1And then my friend Kate, who was the older person.
Guest 1I mean, she's not old by any means, but the older, older of the three.
Guest 1She was my daughter.
Guest 2She was only 46.
Guest 2I thought she was going to say she was 80, but.
Guest 1Yeah, I know, she's so cute.
Guest 1Yeah.
Guest 1So, I mean, it took me forever to get them.
Guest 2And that was your.
Guest 1That was my daughter, right?
Guest 2Yes.
Guest 1Yeah.
Guest 1Grace is my daughter.
Guest 1And then Autumn is the daughter of a lady who took my course and we became really close in the time that she was taking my course.
Guest 1And, you know, I love giving young people a voice.
Guest 1So that was not.
Guest 1That was not.
Guest 1I was just like, here's your.
Guest 1Here's your place.
Guest 1Go for it.
Guest 1So that was.
Guest 1That was really fun.
Guest 2I was gonna say, I have a feeling you've covered just about everything, frankly, even though I know you're still going.
Guest 2I mean, you've covered a lot of stuff, obviously, you know, but I guess you're getting new listeners all the time and all of that, but you've covered a lot of stuff, you know.
Guest 1I have covered a lot of stuff, yes.
Guest 1I'm actually going back right now and doing a, an intent.
Guest 1Like I think one of the.
Guest 1It's maybe like episodes two and four.
Guest 1Like right at the beginning, I did the whole coming out process, like talking about the coming out process for, for kids and then coming out process for parents.
Guest 1And those are two of my most popular episodes.
Guest 1People are always asking questions.
Guest 1And so I was like, well, I need to do like a deeper dive on these.
Guest 1So I'm doing.
Guest 1So It'll be a 12 part series of one episode for each stage and really like going into it a lot deeper.
Guest 2No, I have a feeling.
Guest 2I have a feeling for you, for you personally, the coming out process, even Though I think you said it's a lifetime thing.
Guest 2It was a big deal for you and your family, obviously, and it became something that really, you know.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1Yeah.
Guest 1Well, and I think, you know, even if it's not like it.
Guest 1I think it.
Guest 1It helps explain a lot of things.
Guest 1So if you're like.
Guest 1Like, I was on this call on Friday and with these.
Guest 1With parents, and they were talking about these different things, and I'm like, oh, well, that's completely, like, appropriate for this stage of where they are.
Guest 1Like, that is appropriate, you know, what they're feeling or developmental behavior or whatever.
Guest 1Like, explaining.
Guest 1And then for.
Guest 1For them, I'm like, this is very, you know, very normal that you're feeling.
Guest 1Like your whole world is blowing up.
Guest 1Like, that is normal.
Guest 1This is what happens.
Guest 1Like, there's nothing wrong with you.
Guest 1So I think it's the whole, like, normalizing it.
Guest 1Right?
Guest 1Like, yeah, this is.
Guest 1You know, and that was like, such a huge thing for me.
Guest 1So regardless of where you are on the spectrum of shock, I think it's good to.
Guest 1It's always good to be like, oh, okay, that's what that is.
Guest 1So not a big deal.
Guest 1Right?
Guest 1Or this is what the.
Guest 1Like, this.
Guest 1These are the kind of supports that I need to find for, you know, my child or for myself.
Guest 1So.
Guest 1And I'm very big on.
Guest 1Like, this is not.
Guest 1Like, you are not to dump your crap on your kid.
Guest 1Like, you know, that's because people really want to do that.
Guest 1And I'm like, they're 14.
Guest 1Like, you know, like, one of the things I was in this.
Guest 1I mean, this was so frustrating, but this dad was like, you know, they.
Guest 1They can't even brush their teeth every day.
Guest 1How can they decide that they're transgender?
Guest 1And I was like, oh, the number of things that are wrong in that sentence.
Guest 1Like, I don't even know where to start right now.
Guest 2No, no.
Guest 2I remember.
Guest 2I remember reading in one of those books by the.
Guest 2She said, like, a parent's job is to hold their kids anxiety for them.
Guest 2So they dump it on us, and we hold it for them.
Guest 2We're not supposed to dump it on.
Guest 2You know, and.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2And it's okay to get angry and all of that stuff.
Guest 2Right?
Guest 1Like, right, exactly.
Guest 2I had a bowl.
Guest 2We had a bowling reunion in New York City the other day for campers.
Guest 2And I just talked to one of the mothers who came first, and she said the hardest thing she's dealing with is that her daughter keeps talking about, don't call her by her dead name.
Guest 2Her dead name.
Guest 2Her dead name.
Guest 2She said.
Guest 2She said.
Guest 2Every time I hear that, she goes.
Guest 2I think to myself, do you know how many hours your father and I spent lying in bed reading through to come up for that with that dead name?
Guest 2That was four months of work and love to.
Guest 2And I try, and I get it, but it's okay for her to be angry about it.
Guest 2She just doesn't need to say it to her kid.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1Well, she has to go through her process.
Guest 1Right?
Guest 1Like, absolutely.
Guest 1And, you know, you have to let that go because.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1And it's such a hard, hard thing.
Guest 1I struggle with that with.
Guest 1With Grace, who, you know, the other night at dinner, she looked at my husband, and I.
Guest 1She was like, you know, I would really appreciate it.
Guest 1It would be great if you guys could really try to start calling me by Grayson and using they more often.
Guest 1And I was like, absolutely.
Guest 1Like.
Guest 1And thank you.
Guest 1And thank you for understanding that this is hard.
Guest 1It's not, you know, and for any parent, it's.
Guest 1This is a.
Guest 1You're not going to get it overnight.
Guest 1Like, all of a sudden, you're not going to be like, oh, okay, they them, or, you know, he them or, you know, whatever it is, no parent.
Guest 1We're slow, man.
Guest 1Kids have to, like, cut us a little slack.
Guest 1I'm always like, guys, come on, I'm over 30.
Guest 1It's just downhill from there.
Guest 2No.
Guest 2When they fill out the application for the camp application, you know, they put in their kid's legal name, and then they usually put in brackets, another name.
Guest 2But they call me on the phone and they say, I don't want that name, you know, their birth name to appear anywhere.
Guest 2You know, they're very nervous.
Guest 2I try and tell them it doesn't really matter, because the day they come, they're going to tell us they're, you know, exactly what they want, and that's all we're going to call them.
Guest 2Pronoun, whatever.
Guest 2But in there, you could see how scared.
Guest 1They.
Guest 2Really nervous that we're going to call them by the wrong name, you know?
Guest 1Absolutely.
Guest 1Absolutely.
Guest 1And I think, too, you know, just having watched, like, you, like, you.
Guest 1You see how the kids, like, how they're experiencing this, Right?
Guest 1Like, kind of the.
Guest 1This process for them.
Guest 1And it is.
Guest 1It is very intense, and it is a very big deal.
Guest 1It's not something that they're taking lightly.
Guest 1And they have thought about this, their new name, Right?
Guest 1They've thought about this name.
Guest 1This name means something to them.
Guest 1And I think that's something that's, you know, well worth Talking about as, you know, as well.
Guest 1And it's hard when, you know, you and I can see it from.
Guest 1We have the luxury of being able to see it from both sides.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1So it's kind of like holding it for both.
Guest 1Like, it's a both.
Guest 2And that's a really good point.
Guest 2And I never really thought that how much time they may have put into it even.
Guest 2So that's a really good point for me to think about, because sometimes it feels pretty random, you know, whatever.
Guest 2But maybe it's not, you know.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1Well, I'm sure there are cases where it is very random, but I think there are other cases where it is something that there's great meaning to whatever.
Guest 1That, you know, whatever their name is, their chosen name is.
Guest 1So.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 1I mean, that would be a fascinating conversation in and of itself.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1Like, what made you pick this name?
Guest 1Like, does.
Guest 1What is the meaning?
Guest 1Just, like.
Guest 1Because I think that would help parents who are like, I spent all this time, you know, I mean, I did.
Guest 1I totally know.
Guest 1We all know, right.
Guest 1We're.
Guest 1Took us all forever.
Guest 1Unless we're, like, naming our kids after ourselves.
Guest 1This process is a process.
Guest 1So I think it would be a great thing for kids to be like, no, this is.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1I put this.
Guest 1I put this thought in it.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 2We've had a lot of.
Guest 2Lately planet names.
Guest 2We had, like, four.
Guest 2Mars is.
Guest 2And, you know, things.
Guest 2And we always.
Guest 2And we've had a lot of planets.
Guest 2We've had a lot of Neptunes and things.
Guest 2It's interesting.
Guest 2I don't know exactly where that came from, but.
Guest 2Yeah, good.
Guest 2Well, I'll remember that when they, you know.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1The other thing that I've noticed, too, and I.
Guest 1That I think is quite fascinating is sometimes there's, like, a transitional name.
Guest 1So there's, you know, the.
Guest 1The dead name, and then there's a transitional name, and then there's their chosen name.
Guest 1And I think that's really fascinating, too.
Guest 2You think it's a process, just like coming out is or whatever, to some extent.
Guest 1I mean, there's got to be something.
Guest 1Some research out there on this or somebody who knows, you know, certainly more than I do anecdotally.
Guest 1You know, I also.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2I also wonder why 90% of our, you know, transgender kids, and Maybe we have 250 or more, why 90% were assigned female at birth for us, and, you know, more so than.
Guest 2And, you know, we have both.
Guest 2But 90% of our transgender campers are assigned female at birth.
Guest 2I mean, I do think girls in general are more adventurous they're more brave when it comes to all of this, you know, kind of stuff and going to camp in some ways, but it's a real big difference in our camp, at least percentage wise.
Guest 1That is fascinating.
Guest 1I wonder if it has something to do with just, I mean girls typically develop before boys, right?
Guest 1Even though gender, when you think about gender, you really, I mean gender can be known as early, you know, pretty early, really early.
Guest 1But that is a fascinating.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2Like I've worried personally if it's because girls look around at what's being offered to them and just look around and go, no, I do wonder about that.
Guest 2I also wonder what they've seen on the Internet and I don't know any of this, but whether they've seen things, whether it's sexualized or whatever and they just look.
Guest 2Not for me, I don't know if any of that's true, but that's where I go sometimes, you know.
Guest 1Yeah, that would be an interesting, I think that would actually be an interesting conversation to have with the kids in.
Guest 1Because I mean you could, you could do that in a way that's very non judgmental, like just out of like sheer curiosity.
Guest 1Because I think that is definitely a question and a concern that is coming from, you know, parents and people who don't understand, right.
Guest 1So to be able to have kids say these are the factors that I've taken into consideration or this is what's come at me and this is how I've internalized it, right.
Guest 1Like this is how I see that.
Guest 1Which is totally different than a 40 year old is going to see it.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1And, and if that did have a factor, although, you know, I still like my, to me it's such a, I feel so firmly this is not a decision that they're making, right.
Guest 1It is a decision that they're making to be brave to come out.
Guest 1But this is something that they've all always known or they've known, right?
Guest 1Like this is who they are.
Guest 1So, so does that incoming information, does that give them the courage then to, to do it now as opposed to waiting until they're in their 20s or their 30s.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1And maybe that's why there are more girls in their teens than boys, right.
Guest 1That are transitioning.
Guest 1I am just spitballing here.
Guest 1I'm sure I'm going to get in trouble for something I just said, but that was literally just stream of consciousness.
Guest 2And I did once read a book by a woman who's a psychiatrist, but she's anti trans.
Guest 2She's very, you know, she's really.
Guest 2And she writes about what's going on with.
Guest 2With girls, and it was a hard book to read, you know, but, you know, she has all these, anyway, facts and figures.
Guest 2But it is interesting, Heather.
Guest 2And they used to say transgender kids knew when they were three, you know, that they were in, you know, the wrong body and whatever.
Guest 2Most of my campers, you know, a handful of them did, but most of them when they were 13, 14, 15.
Guest 2So it.
Guest 2Who knows?
Guest 2I think everything's probably changing, right?
Guest 1Yeah, I mean, I think there's.
Guest 1It's definitely on a continuum, and I think there is, you know, when.
Guest 1When the question is, why?
Guest 1Why are there more transgender people now?
Guest 1Well, because it's safer in a lot of areas, a lot of places geographically, for them, it's not safer in others.
Guest 1It's terrifyingly going backwards.
Guest 1But that is why.
Guest 1It's not that there's all of a sudden a bigger number of, you know, kids who are lgbtq, young people, young, you know, young adults, that it's safer for them, that there are safe places for them to be who they are and to, like, explore it.
Guest 1And I think there's definitely an exploration in there, too.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1So.
Guest 2And the idea that we're.
Guest 2They're busting up a whole archetype that probably needs to be busted up in a thousand ways.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2We made a.
Guest 2Of this.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2We made a lot of this stuff up.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2You know, we did girls or this, you know, whatever, you know.
Guest 1Oh, a social construct.
Guest 1Yes, Completely.
Guest 1Completely.
Guest 1So I actually want to talk a little bit, like, more specifically about Camp Odyssey, because I want people to know about Camp Odyssey and what you do, how it came into being, and all that good stuff.
Guest 2Good.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 2And we call it Odyssey Teen Camp, even though a lot of people say Camp Odyssey, so we call it Odyssey Teen Camp.
Guest 2Okay.
Guest 1All right.
Guest 1There we go.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 2Let's see what I can tell you.
Guest 2Well, you know, I started it when I was, like, I was 44 years old, and I was working at a place called the Omega Institute, which is a big adult retreat center in New York.
Guest 2Kind of years ago was places that, like, whoever went on Oprah would go to the Omega Institute and talk, and people would pay a lot of money to go and listen to them.
Guest 2And I was, like, a volunteer there, and I was a little bit involved.
Guest 2Remember, like, years ago, there was the whole men's movement.
Guest 2You're a little jugg for it.
Guest 2But, you know, men, we were going into the woods, and we were drumming.
Guest 2It was a whole big thing.
Guest 2You Know, I don't know.
Guest 2It was very big, and we all had animal names and things like that.
Guest 2I don't even.
Guest 2I don't know.
Guest 2But anyway, I was working, and I was leading, like, men's groups, and I had a lot of friends who had teenage boys, and.
Guest 2And I hadn't been married.
Guest 2I had no children, and.
Guest 2But they told me, I'm going to cry, but they told me that could I hang out with their son?
Guest 2And I'd say, why?
Guest 2And they'd say, well, he really likes hanging out with you.
Guest 2I guess I wasn't a dad.
Guest 2I was probably very immature in some ways, you know, And.
Guest 2I don't know.
Guest 2I guess I was less judgmental than maybe a lot of authors were.
Guest 2So, anyway, I would hang out with a few of my friend's sons, and maybe I helped them a little bit with whatever they were dealing with.
Guest 2And then I got the idea that maybe I could start a camp for teenagers.
Guest 2And I was working at Omega, and I brought it to them, and they had a pretty big reach.
Guest 2You know, they had a catalog that went to 500,000 people, and they said, yeah, you can do it.
Guest 2We'll support you.
Guest 2If you find a place, we'll let you call it Omega Teen Camp, and we'll be partners.
Guest 2I remember the deal was I got no salary, but I would split whatever the profits were in this nonprofit organization that they ran.
Guest 2They're wonderful people, but they like to make a profit, you know, So I was kind of off and running.
Guest 2And it was interesting.
Guest 2I had never committed to anything in my life.
Guest 2In some ways, I had never committed to a job or a woman or anything.
Guest 2But somehow, the day I started this camp, I was pretty committed.
Guest 2You know, it was.
Guest 2And I didn't know what I was doing.
Guest 2I was in incredibly naive.
Guest 2I didn't, you know, know from 2200 regulations, you know, all of that.
Guest 1Sure.
Guest 1Oh, my goodness.
Guest 1Yeah.
Guest 1That's a big undertaking.
Guest 2But I found a camp.
Guest 2It was a Presbyterian center, and they gave us the worst, you know, part of the facility.
Guest 2And we.
Guest 2And we started.
Guest 2I think the first year, we.
Guest 2We had maybe 30 or 40 kids, and we lost $20,000.
Guest 2And I remember I had to write out a check for 10,000 to the Omega Institute after working.
Guest 2After working literally, literally 20 hours a day every day and making nothing, but I somehow didn't care.
Guest 2I guess I had money, and I didn't care, and I knew I was in this forever.
Guest 2So, I don't know.
Guest 2We were off and running, and we were always a Little wacky.
Guest 2And I think we were always a good camp for, you know, for, you know, kids who were gay.
Guest 2But, you know, that wasn't anything near a focus.
Guest 2You know, we were just a regular wacky summer camp for kids who probably struggled to fit in somehow.
Guest 2That's who came.
Guest 2You know, we had this tagline, a great place to be exactly who you are.
Guest 2And parents said, okay, you know, that's good for my kid, you know, so it was interesting.
Guest 2And.
Guest 2And then it grew.
Guest 2And, you know, it was never easy, Heather.
Guest 2Always hard, you know, but it grew from 40 kids, maybe to 200.
Guest 2And Omega started making money, and I started making a little money, and everybody was very happy.
Guest 2And.
Guest 2And then it kind of.
Guest 2It's interesting that enrollment started going down, and maybe it went from 200 to 140 or 150.
Guest 2And all of a sudden, Omega wasn't making much money.
Guest 2And I.
Guest 2I don't know.
Guest 2I thought maybe.
Guest 2I don't.
Guest 2I didn't know what was going to happen, but I knew I was.
Guest 2I was in, you know?
Guest 2But I'll tell you, like, a little bit of a crazy story that my wife says I shouldn't tell.
Guest 2Every year after camp, I would meet with these Omega management people because they weren't at camp, so they didn't know anything.
Guest 2And we would do what he called a debrief.
Guest 2I guess I knew they weren't happy that it was going a little bit down in registration, but I was in a Barnes and Noble in New York City in a basement, reading magazines and drinking coffee, and a voice said to me, keep it going.
Guest 2And I said.
Guest 2And it was very clear there was some voice.
Guest 2I really thought it was outside my head, you know?
Guest 1Yeah.
Guest 2And it sounded like it.
Guest 2And I said, what?
Guest 2And they said, keep camp going.
Guest 2And I went, okay, no problem.
Guest 2And.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2I mean, I got it.
Guest 2And like, maybe a week later, I met with Omega.
Guest 2And they sat there and they said, you know, we appreciate the work you've done, but we're going to drop camp.
Guest 2And I just said, okay, no problem.
Guest 2But I'm going to keep it going, because, you know, I didn't tell them I heard a voice, but I told them.
Guest 2I told them it was what I had to do.
Guest 2And it created a whole thing where they went, oh, no, you're not.
Guest 2I still don't understand, you know, frankly, 12 years later, exactly why I had lawyers, you know, two lawyers calling me, trying to stop me.
Guest 2It was.
Guest 2But.
Guest 1Oh, my goodness.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 2I don't really know why.
Guest 2I don't know if it was a liability thing or more just, you know, you can't do this.
Guest 2Anyway, so it was interesting.
Guest 2I'll tell you another funny thing.
Guest 2We were.
Guest 2We were Omega Teen Camp, so we were always called otc, you know, OTC Omega Teen Camp.
Guest 2That was in all our songs.
Guest 2All.
Guest 2Everything.
Guest 2And I told them, if you kind of back off and leave me alone and maybe support me a little, maybe.
Guest 2Maybe give me anything to, you know, make it easier, I said, I'll come up with a different name.
Guest 2We won't be OTC anymore.
Guest 1Sure.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2I'll be Adam's Teen Camp, whatever we want to do.
Guest 2And they said, no.
Guest 2And I said, okay, well, welcome to Odyssey Teen Camp.
Guest 2And we're still OTC today, like 22 years later.
Guest 2So it's funny.
Guest 1Oh, my gosh, that's so funny.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 2And then I should say, you know, we were struggling.
Guest 2I was losing money every year, and my wife was looking at me.
Guest 2I got married somewhere along the way and.
Guest 2And had a daughter.
Guest 2And my wife was.
Guest 2Every year, she looked at me and said, you know, how long are you going to do this?
Guest 2Because this is our money, you know, kind of thing.
Guest 1Yeah.
Guest 2And.
Guest 2I don't know, a combination of the pandemic and the gender revolution, both of those things came along, and we are just booming.
Guest 2And now we have 350 kids.
Guest 2And I try not to take too many, to be honest, because, you know, any more than 150 kids for us is, you know, that's a little bit of a number that becomes too much, you know, I think we get overwhelmed, you know, so we take 150 kids at a time.
Guest 2Most of them come for two weeks, some come for one week.
Guest 2And I'd say about 80% of them or 90% of them would say that they identify as LGBTQ plus.
Guest 2And most of them are on some kind of gender journey.
Guest 2And our staff is very queer, you know, and everybody's queer.
Guest 2And I don't know, it just seems to work, you know, I love it.
Guest 2It's really fun.
Guest 2And they're the same creative, wonderful, insecure, anxious, sensitive teenagers that they were 22 years ago.
Guest 2They're just talking about their identity a lot, you know, and whatever they're doing, you know.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1Oh, my goodness.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 2It's interesting.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1That is so fun.
Guest 1So tell me.
Guest 1Well, tell everyone where it's located.
Guest 1I know where.
Guest 2Yeah, we're in.
Guest 2We're in the Berkshires, and we have a big, beautiful facility.
Guest 2Yeah, I think we're good at helping Kids have fun and relax.
Guest 2And there is something, heather, like, when 100.
Guest 2When they come that first day and their parents drop them off and they see 150 kids who look like them, you know, in some way, I think some of them can't even believe it.
Guest 2You know, they go like, how did this happen?
Guest 1You know, it's magical.
Guest 2It's pretty magical.
Guest 1I mean, it really is.
Guest 1There is so much to be said for that.
Guest 1The power of that.
Guest 2Right?
Guest 1And, you know, can we talk about that?
Guest 1I mean, what you're doing, being able to see yourself, like, see somebody who you're like, oh, my gosh, this, like, person is like, me, right?
Guest 1Or reading a book where there is a character who looks like you.
Guest 1Like, the importance of being able to do that is so huge.
Guest 1And so I love that you're doing this.
Guest 1Thank you so much.
Guest 2Thank you.
Guest 2And they understand each other, obviously, in ways that, you know.
Guest 2And of course, when they have 25 and 30 year old, you know, queer counselors who are, you know, transgender and have jobs and have lived through things and have, you know, husbands or wives and relationships, I do think it opens some things to them where they go, wow, I could do that.
Guest 2And, you know, some of them are living really interesting, creative things, and they go, wow, I could do that.
Guest 2You know, Absolutely.
Guest 2Because I would imagine for a lot of our teenagers, and I'm sure this is for gay and straight, they must look out at the world that we have to offer them, and some of them must have a hard time finding anything to feel really kind of excited about.
Guest 2Don't you think?
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1Oh, I definitely think, yes.
Guest 1I.
Guest 1I think it's a very overwhelming prospect.
Guest 1And I think because this generation of kids, too, especially, is.
Guest 1They are so aware of, like, I always think about, like, when I was that.
Guest 1That age, like, and even in college, like, you know, you're focused on getting a degree.
Guest 1You're really kind of aware of what's going on in, like, your own geographic area.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1You don't have a whole lot of, you know, national awareness, let alone global awareness.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1And these kids do.
Guest 1And that's so much that's coming at them all the time.
Guest 1That and their, you know, their brains aren't developed, and they're, you know, chemical hot messes.
Guest 1And I mean, there's just so much that you think, well, of course this is hard.
Guest 1I mean, think it's.
Guest 1It is such a gift to be able to have a place like, out of CT camp or, you know, these different opportunities where kids can kind of, like, Take a breath and be like, okay, like somebody.
Guest 1There's a path there.
Guest 1There is.
Guest 1Oh, I can do that.
Guest 1You know, or.
Guest 1That is really interesting.
Guest 1And that's positive because, you know, there's.
Guest 1There's not a lot of positive.
Guest 2No.
Guest 2I would imagine some of them have never been really.
Guest 2Never mind celebrated.
Guest 2They haven't even been seen, like, for who they are ever, you know, and so when they look around and there's all these kids who love them just like that, you know, it must be.
Guest 2Yeah, I think it's wonderful.
Guest 2And somehow teenagers need teenagers, don't they?
Guest 2We could.
Guest 2We could talk about.
Guest 2We could tell our teenage forever that, don't worry about it.
Guest 2You know, you won't care about that.
Guest 2But I guess when you're 13 or 14, those friendships, there's no getting around how important they are, probably.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 1Yeah.
Guest 1I think they're, I think, not only important, but it is such a pivotal time and so much, you know, is going on that whatever is going on with the relationships, it does leave a mark.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 2I'm afraid it kind of defines them to a great extent at that time.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 1Yes.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1Again, I would love to have somebody who has the, you know, psychological and the background to be able to explain that, because, again, that's very anecdotal, but.
Guest 1Holy cow, just.
Guest 1It is.
Guest 1It really does.
Guest 1It really does.
Guest 1And how can we better support, you know, as parents, even though they need those positive relationships with their peers, how, as parents, can we support and not make it more difficult for them?
Guest 1Because I think even sometimes when you're well meaning, you make it more difficult.
Guest 2Yeah, I know, I know you've done a lot of podcasts on that, and I've listened to a lot of them.
Guest 2A couple of things come up.
Guest 2I only have a daughter who's nine, so I haven't even lived this, but been with 4,000 teenagers, I guess, in the last 20 years.
Guest 1Yeah.
Guest 2So a couple of.
Guest 2Yeah, I mean, obviously acceptance is something you talk about all the time, I think maybe talking less and giving less advice.
Guest 2I've heard that said a little bit with you guys.
Guest 2I see how that makes.
Guest 2Could make a lot of sense and holding them.
Guest 2I have a friend who only works with teenage girls, and she said to me that parents of teenagers definitely need to stay in the game a little bit because I guess she sees a lot of, you know, parents whose their kid is 14 or 15, and they kind of take 10 steps back, you know, and she thinks it's a mistake, you know.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2So you gotta.
Guest 2I See, you say you got to hold them just the same way without giving them a ton of advice and hold all their anxiety and try and understand everything you can with knowing you're never going to understand exactly what they're feeling.
Guest 2But she's changed.
Guest 2She used the term stay in the game.
Guest 2You know, I like that.
Guest 2You know, I do think one of her, one of her patients had committed suicide and I remember meeting with her not long after that and I guess she, she said, parents have got to stay in the game.
Guest 2I don't know if she looked in that particular situation and that girl was alone.
Guest 2But anyway, yeah, I'm so sorry.
Guest 1I think that's a great, that is a great phrase and it does shift a lot.
Guest 1And, and as parents, and I'm still, I still have terrible days where I take everything personally and I'm like, why are you being so teenager?
Guest 1And you're hurting my feelings.
Guest 1So just, just know that happens to everybody.
Guest 1But it's also one of those where I have like this out of body experience and I'm like, don't let it get to you.
Guest 1This isn't about you.
Guest 1Is not.
Guest 1None of this stuff is about us.
Guest 1It's all like, they're right.
Guest 1We're just here to like hold them, like kind of.
Guest 1I feel like we're kind of like the like.
Guest 1And then when they're ready to, then that's when we are here.
Guest 1Right?
Guest 1Totally.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1And validate and then let them go back out and then they come and yell or cry or whatever.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1So it's definitely a, like, you've got to get your, like your thick skin on your Teflon, whatever.
Guest 2You totally, especially, especially moms because, like, teenage girls, you're the only ones that they're courageous enough to dump on because they're scared of everybody else out there.
Guest 2So you're, you know, they really.
Guest 2I'm afraid, you know, sometimes being a punching bag is the best thing you can be for them in some ways, you know.
Guest 1Totally.
Guest 1And which almost sometimes might be a little more painful is I found that teenage girls like to tell things in real time.
Guest 1So you are going to relive every story like you were right there.
Guest 1And you just have to smile and nod and it is the greatest thing ever.
Guest 1And you're going to miss this someday, I promise.
Guest 1So just, you know, listen, my husband's always like, you know, they, they never tell me all this stuff and I'm like, do you want to hear five stories in real time?
Guest 1You would check out about three minutes in.
Guest 2And Some.
Guest 2And.
Guest 2And.
Guest 2And you have to listen, Heather, without saying, are you crazy to them sometimes?
Guest 2I guess, too, huh?
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1Oh, for sure.
Guest 1And your facial expression.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1Love smiles on the inside.
Guest 1You could be like, are you freaking kidding me?
Guest 1But on the outside, love.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 2And I also think it's important for parents to.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 2To not blame themselves for anything in some ways, because, I mean, you know, we love the hell out of our kids, and some of them struggle like crazy, you know, and some of them didn't do anything wrong other than being a parent and a human.
Guest 2And I would imagine it's very easy to blame yourself, you know, kind of thing.
Guest 2So I hope parents don't do that too much because every parent I've ever met, you know, just owned nothing, wanted nothing for their kid but them, for them to be happy.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2Even if they didn't have a clue how to help them.
Guest 2Right?
Guest 1Yeah, absolutely.
Guest 1Absolutely.
Guest 1And I.
Guest 1That is very, very good advice.
Guest 1And it's very difficult because I think that is kind of the, like, instant reaction.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1If your child is struggling, you instantly think, well, what did I do?
Guest 1Like, how did I cause this?
Guest 1Did I cause this?
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1And.
Guest 1And how there's all that stuff that's just natural as a parent.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1So I think the more we can say that, the more it is helpful.
Guest 2Right.
Guest 2A friend.
Guest 2I kind of stole it because a friend of mine has a son who's really struggling, and he went to see.
Guest 2He went to see a man who's a guidance counselor, who's a.
Guest 2Who was a good friend of us, and he said to my friend, he said, I've been doing this for 32 years, he said, and I stopped blaming parents a long time ago.
Guest 2So, you know.
Guest 2Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Guest 1I thought that is very, very wise.
Guest 1And it is.
Guest 1It is very.
Guest 1It is very true.
Guest 1And as parents, I think we show our fears and our apprehensions and in all different ways.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1So sometimes it can come out as, like, obvious concern or fear, but sometimes it can come out as arrogance.
Guest 1Sometimes it can come out as, you know, overconfidence.
Guest 1Like, it can be like the total opposite.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1Things.
Guest 1So there's so many different ways I found it so fascinating.
Guest 2I'm thinking underneath it, it's all fear, isn't it?
Guest 2But it comes out in different ways.
Guest 2Right?
Guest 1Absolutely.
Guest 1Absolutely.
Guest 1You know, whatever the coping mechanism of choice.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1Is.
Guest 1Yeah.
Guest 1So.
Guest 1Oh, my goodness.
Guest 1Well, Adam, I have loved having this conversation.
Guest 1I am going to put in the show notes how to reach you, how to reach to the camp.
Guest 1Can we put an application for the.
Guest 2Camp in or the website would be great.
Guest 1Okay.
Guest 2And I think my guy sent you our website kind of thing.
Guest 2Yeah, the website would be great.
Guest 2And I think they can do everything from there.
Guest 2Yeah.
Guest 1Okay.
Guest 1Wonderful.
Guest 1Well, I hope everyone comes and checks out Odyssey Teen Camp.
Guest 1It sounds just wonderful.
Guest 1And thank you so much for your work and your dedication to keeping this going and providing such an incredible safe space for our kids.
Guest 2Thanks.
Guest 2Yeah, it's really good work.
Guest 2Whenever I think of doing something else, I always go, well, that doesn't sound as good as this.
Guest 2So, you know.
Guest 1Right.
Guest 1Yeah, I'm right there with you.
Guest 1Absolutely.
Guest 2All right, thanks, Heather.
Guest 2All right, we'll talk soon.
Guest 2Okay.
Heather HesterThanks so much for joining me today.
Heather HesterIf you and enjoyed today's episode, I would be so grateful.
Heather HesterFor a rating or a review, click on the link in the show notes or go to my website, chrysalismama.com to stay up to date on my latest resources, as well as to learn how you can work with me.
Heather HesterPlease share this podcast with anyone who needs to know that they are not alone.
Heather HesterAnd remember, remember to just breathe until next time.