Community, Service, Adventure.
Community at Camp (Rising 3rd-11th Grades)
Where our community begins – one week of summer camp in either Circle at Camp Twin Lakes, Circle at EKC, or Circle at Tapawingo.
Campers explore their grief through various activities. The personal journey at this stage is inward-facing. Circle Camps meets our campers where they are in their grief experience.
Campers learn summer camp traditions, culture, and songs.
Engage in summer camp activities like swimming, canoeing, kickball, tennis, soccer, arts and craft, and more.
Leaders in Training I and II (rising 10th and 11th graders) practice how to become a counselor through leading activities, helping out in the bunks, and being role models for younger campers.
Service (Rising 12th Grade)
Campers use the tools they've learned at camp to give back to the community through service projects. This part of their journey is outward-facing and encourages our rising 12th graders to utilize the work they have done on themselves to lift up others in need.
Campers engage in practical skill building through hands-on projects, problem solving, and planning.
This part of our program encourages a spectrum of leadership styles and provides opportunities for various personality types to lead through their own strengths.
Adventure (12th Grade +)
The adventure portion of our campers' journey is inward and outward-facing and is for those who have just graduated high school.
Campers partake in a backcountry wilderness trip where they gain skills like self-efficacy, map-reading, cooking, first aid, group leadership, resilience, and are able to improve upon their group-based leadership skills.
Learning inner strength, female empowerment, and the concept of individual success = community success, campers are challenged both physically and mentally.
Each evening ends with a camper-led "Circle Time."
Since our inception, approximately 1,500 grieving young girls have attended a Circle Camps. Campers are accepted in the program on a need-blind basis and attend camp at no charge. Volunteer counselors come from all over the U.S., range in age from 19-74, and have a return rate of 90+%.
Over the past 20 years, we have learned that hosting a group of grieving young girls in an overnight camp environment, supported by dedicated, compassionate volunteer counselors dramatically impacts the lives of the girls who attend our programs. We have also learned that the mental health community underserves grieving girls, in particular teens, due to the long-term nature of grief. Our four-year Leaders in Training (LIT) program addresses this gap in services.
Grieving youth and teens often feel isolated and removed from the world of their peers. The Circle program gives them the tools, support, and skills to cope with their losses and enables them to make lasting friendships with others who understand their losses. Circle is unique in its integration of age-appropriate grief activities into a traditional overnight camp program.
Circle creates an environment that is safe, supportive, and accepting so our campers can develop a healthy sense of self and lasting friendships with girls who understand their loss. Our highly specialized, age-appropriate grief programming, developed and implemented by a team of licensed social workers and psychologists gives girls and teenagers the tools and skills to cope with their losses.