My Wood Badge experience started at 5 am on Thursday June 16 when I woke up to take a shower and load my gear. I picked up Andrew at his house and us two tired fellows left the valley heading for Krupp Scout Hollow close to Rigby, Idaho. Ryan, from my same troop in Teton Valley, and the Scoutmaster Tom Barry met us bright and early as we arrived about 7:20 am. We threw our stuff on a trailer and was ushered right into the program.
Ryan was going to be the Senior Patrol Leader which is some of the reason why I picked the June session. Unfortunately Teresa couldn't make it as we ended up having a lot of plans fall through and nobody to take care of our kids. It turned out for the best though as some of them came down with strep throat which we would not want to spread to our poor would-be babysitter.
Like a dummy I didn't take any pictures until the last day of Wood Badge this week. I do plan on remedying that this next week as we are going back on Thursday. The staff have been taking tons of photos so I am wondering if by chance we can get copies of those.
For now I am just posting a few photos and will write more as the week progresses. This little bit is just a primer for what I will eventually add. I can say that it has been a great time so far and I have learned a lot. A good majority of this has been turning the light bulb back on and letting me know that I have been slacking in my duties as a Scoutmaster. I will shortly remedy that as well as I have a lot of things to consider and improve on. One good thing that I will mention right now is that one of our assignments is to create a vision of something we want to accomplish over the next course of a year or so. We create specific goals to accomplish this. I will expound on what I am doing later but I promise it will make these boys great men and leaders. I also promise to do my best to not fail them.
I've only known a little about Lord Baden Powell and have learned a lot more here. I can say he was a fantastic man and leader and probably inspired by God to form the Boy Scouts. I think I will find a book about him to learn more.
We have played a lot of great games, all with meaning. I wish I would have at least taken a photo of our rocket we built. It shot pretty far but wouldn't hang in the air as long as we would have liked even though it went way across the field. I think it was too aerodynamic with the amount of weight we had in it so it didn't waste any time letting the air push it around.
We learned to set up camp stoves and tents and to work as a team. We have learned how to hold proper non-denominational meetings with a wonderful simulation (which I was always curious about). Communication and team building exercises are predominant among many other important things. We had a good discussion on productivity and morale in a team. We watched great movie clips and even a full movie all with a purpose. We are making good friendships that will probably last a lifetime.
Some of the games will hit you in the gut. I was actually a little mad at the situation after one of the games. I felt like my integrity had been compromised and that people were looking at me as if I was a traitor. You could tell by the way other patrols would groan as we progressed through the game. At first I didn't recognize that the groans were directed at us. I had an idea that maybe we weren't doing something right toward the end but I did not take time to look at the scorecard to figure out why it was going bad. We thought we were actually winning and as we had been kind of the butt of a few jokes, it felt good to be ahead for once. In the end we found out we had not won at all and if this had been a real life situation, would have let a lot of people down. I was definitely upset and I had to go out and call Teresa and talk it over with her to kind of sort it all out.
I have never quit anything in my life and am ashamed to admit that the thought crossed my mind to just leave. I said my prayers that night and read my scriptures and it just happened to be a section of Isaiah that talked about hardships and that God gives you hard things because he loves you. I have done a lot of hard things in my life, things a lot harder than Wood Badge. I have patients that sometimes think I am a traitor and call me names on the internet. They call me names because I won't give in to a request that would affect my integrity or harm them. They do not understand sometimes that they could be harmed if I give in or that I could potentially be breaking a law or break the ethics of an Optometrist. They will then put a bad review on the internet. It makes me sad, but I feel ok because I know my integrity did not break down. This game was different and I did not feel ok because I felt like it was an attack and a deception and my integrity was harmed and a lot of people saw it. In reality it was a really good game and after thinking it over I realized I had learned a lot about myself. I was apathetic to the situation and found out the reason why apathy is bad.
Anyway, tune in to more stuff later as I have a lot more to add. I am actually not sure if I can be specific to what we actually did so I tried to make this more general and not specific.
| Tent building exercise |
| Some of my patrol, the Bobwhites |
| Class Time |
| We had great food and it was surprisingly more healthy than most scout camps |
| Staff did a great job. Notice Ryan to the far left over there. |
Bob Whites Rock!
ReplyDeleteYes, they do! I am proud to be an honorary Bobwhite!
DeleteYep they do!
DeleteYou are sneaky with your pics! I can see that you are already a great leader and Wood Badge will bring that out even more! I have a name of a great book on Baden Powell. I will talk to you when you come back on Thursday! I am so excited for you!
ReplyDeleteWow I don't think very many people ever read my blogs. Yes I would be excited to hear about that book!
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