Friendships per week


Summer Matters

Inspiring confident kind kids & forever friendships

Think about how you became friends with your closest childhood buddy.

Probably looked something like this:

Meet somewhere random ??? something happened, stuff went down, time went by, other stuff happened you can’t remember ???

That not-at-all clear, sort of confusing timeline make any sense to you?

Maybe it kinda-sorta does.

If it doesn’t, no worries because there’s actual math behind the ??? section.

There’s a formula. And it’s so clear to me when I talk with alumni… camp figured it out.

Friendship Isn’t Magic, It’s Math

Friendship doesn’t just appear out of the blue.

It’s built from hundreds, maybe thousands, of tiny moments.

Each small interaction is a micro-building block.

These micro-moments look like:

(Take a deep breath and read them in one shot)

Sharing a paddle on the lake. Sitting with someone at lunch. Offering to help carry rocks during Gold Rush. Laughing at the same joke in the hollow. Being on the same team during Color War. Walking back to your lodge after Jacki and Bob games. Remembering something they said yesterday. Waiting for someone who’s tying their shoe. Small compliments. Quick check-ins.

One or two moments of kindness can launch a connection.

But real friendship comes from these moments stacking up.

Eventually, you hit critical mass. That’s when you wake up one day and realize, “Whoa, nice! This person is my FRIEND!”

The ???. It’s this. Hundreds of small, kind interactions that you stopped counting on the path to being pals.

Friendships Per Week

Camp concentrates friendship opportunities.

In a typical week non-camp, kids might have 10-20 meaningful micro-moments with any given person.

At camp? Try 100+.

That’s because it’s together.

Eating meals together. Doing activities together. Living in the same bunk together. Navigating challenges together. Downtime together.

Every single one is a micro-moment opportunity.

What might take months anywhere else takes days at camp.

Not because camp is magic. Because camp maximizes the number of chances.

It’s Cool to Be Kind

The micro-moments only work if the culture rewards them.

One thing I am falling in love with at K&E is that kindness gets celebrated.

Showing up for your friend is hero stuff. Offering help is cool. Then there’s social gravity in a pro-social atmosphere.

Turns out when kindness is cool, kids do more of it.

Now it’s friendship flywheel territory.

More kindness means more micro-moments. More micro-moments means faster friendship formation.

What Friendship Formation Actually Looks Like

Two girls meet on Day 1.

By Day 3, they’ve shared probably 50+ micro-moments.

Partnered in tennis. Sat together at meals. Walked to the waterfront. Laughed during rest hour. Helped each other with cleanup. Shared stories at rest hour.

By Day 7 → asking to be bunkmates next summer.

By Day 14 → future bridesmaids.

End of the session, when parents arrive for pickup → making plans for next year. Easy to see the result.

Harder to see 400+ micro-interactions built it over six weeks.

The Friendship Skill They’ll Use Forever

Kids who learn to create micro-moments become better at friendship.

They learn how to initiate. How to maintain. How to navigate differences. How to repair when things go wrong.

Adults struggle with friendship because we don’t get enough chances.

We don’t live with people. We don’t have built-in structures for micro-moments. And we don’t have counselors helping to guide us.

Camp teaches kids to create those moments themselves.

Your daughter isn’t just making friends at camp. She’s learning how friendship actually works.

That’s a skill she’ll use for life.

The Friendships per Week Promise

Camp kids enter a friendship accelerator.

Not because we have special activities, though we do.

Not because we have great facilities, though we do.

But because we’ve engineered an environment that maximizes micro-moments.

More chances to be kind. More opportunities to connect. More friendships per week than anywhere else.

That’s what camp does.

That confusing friendship timeline you thought about at the beginning? Camp makes it clear.

When enough micro-moments of kindness and fun occurred, a friendship is launched.

And at camp, that friendship is likely to be a forever friendship.

I don’t know about you, but my forever friends are everything to me, and I’d like every kid at K&E to have the same.

Best,

Sylvia

PS - If you aren’t sure your daughter is ready for camp let’s talk about it.

Grab a time with me here!

Sylvia van Meerten

Evergreen Director
sylvia@kenwood-evergreen.com

114 Eagle Pond Rd, Wilmot, NH 03287
Unsubscribe · Preferences

Summer Matters

You know how kids learn by doing? So do leaders. This newsletter pulls one sharp, useful idea each week from the world of summer camp, where growth is real, messy, and unforgettable. Use it at work, home, or wherever you’re building something that matters.

Read more from Summer Matters

Summer Matters Inspiring confident, kind kids & forever friendships Hello from Portugal! Here hiking the Fisherman’s Trail with my friend Blake. Walking all day, working at night. Kinda awesome. The other day, we were moving along the coast, overlooking the most beautiful cliffs, when rain starts pelting us sideways. We slogged through the mud. Completely gross feet. Everything soaked. Eventually, we plop down for lunch by the side of the trail in the bushes. Eating sardines, lettuce, and wet...

Summer Matters Inspiring confident, kind kids & forever friendships Growing up, my dad only cared about two subjects: math and science. History? English? Not as important. Spanish? Definitely didn’t matter as much. Dr. Schott has a PhD in remote sensing. He launched satellites into space and did calculus to figure out what they saw. Imagine Jack Ryan but instead of jacked and handsome, a super nerd with a villain mustache. Got bad grades in the subjects that “mattered”? Kiss screens and...

Summer Matters Inspiring confident, kind kids & forever friendships Last month, we had a K&E reunion in Boston. Pool party. Bunch of us were there. Campers, families, alumni. It was great. Had a blast playing HORSE, soccer, and eating so much pizza. Oh and there was this one small moment where a kid realized she’d forgotten her bathing suit. She could have sat out. Missed the swim time. Felt weird about not being in the pool with her friends. Or even felt bad about forgetting in the first...