hour bus drive away. The kids sleep in cabins with bunk beds. There are campfires
and s'mores and long walks through the woods. The teachers have been prepping us
about this all year long, so all the kids in the grade are excited about it
— except for
me. And it's not even that I'm not excited, because I kind of am
—it's just I've never
slept away from home before and I'm kind of nervous.
Most kids have had sleepovers by the time they're my age. A lot of kids have gone to
sleepaway camps, or stayed with their grandparents or whatever. Not me. Not unless
you include hospital stays, but even then Mom or Dad always stayed with me
overnight. But I never slept over Tata and Poppa's house, or Aunt Kate and Uncle Po's
house. When I was really little, that was mainly because there were too many medical
issues, like my trache tube needing to be cleared every hour, or reinserting my feeding
tube if it got detached. But when I got bigger, I just never felt like sleeping anywhere
else. There was one time when I half slept over Christopher's house. We were about
eight, and we were still best friends. Our family had gone for a visit to his house, and
me and Christopher were having such a great time playing Legos Star Wars that I didn't
want to leave when it was time to go. We were like, "Please, please, please can we
have a sleepover?" So our parents said yes, and Mom and Dad and Via drove home.
And me and Christopher stayed up till midnight playing, until Lisa, his mom, said:
"Okay, guys, time to go to bed." Well, that's when I kind of panicked a bit. Lisa tried to
help me go to sleep, but I just started crying that I wanted to go home. So at one a.m.
Lisa called Mom and Dad, and Dad drove all the way back out to Bridgeport to pick me
up. We didn't get home until three a.m. So my one and only sleepover, up until now,
was pretty much of a disaster, which is why I'm a little nervous about the nature
retreat.
On the other hand, I'm really excited.
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