“The Boy
Under the Tree” by: David Coleman and Kevin Randall
In the
summer recess between freshman and sophomore years in college, I was invited to
be an instructor at a high school leadership camp hosted by a college in
Michigan. I was already highly involved in most campus activities, and I jumped
at the opportunity.
About an
hour into the first day of camp, amid the frenzy of icebreakers and forced
interactions, I first noticed the boy under the tree. He was small and skinny,
and his obvious discomfort and shyness made him appear frail and fragile. Only
50 feet away, 200 eager campers were bumping bodies, playing, joking and
meeting each other, but the boy under the tree seemed to want to be anywhere
other than where he was. The desperate loneliness he radiated almost stopped me
from approaching him, but I remembered the instructions from the senior staff
to stay alert for campers who might feel left out.
As I
walked toward him I said, "Hi, my name is Kevin and I'm one of the
counselors. It's nice to meet you. How are you?" In a shaky, sheepish
voice he reluctantly answered, "Okay, I guess" I calmly asked him if
he wanted to join the activities and meet some new people. He quietly replied,
"No, this is not really my thing."
I could
sense that he was in a new world, that this whole experience was foreign to
him. But I somehow knew it wouldn't be right to push him, either. He didn't
need a pep talk, he needed a friend. After several silent moments, my first
interaction with the boy under the tree was over. At lunch the next day, I
found myself leading camp songs at the top of my lungs for 200 of my new
friends. The campers were eagerly participated. My gaze wandered over the mass
of noise and movement and was caught by the image of the boy from under the
tree, sitting alone, staring out the window. I nearly forgot the words to the
song I was supposed to be leading. At my first opportunity, I tried again, with
the same questions as before: "How are you doing? Are you okay?" To
which he again replied, "Yeah, I'm alright. I just don't really get into
this stuff." As I left the cafeteria, I too realized this was going to
take more time and effort than I had thought -- if it was even possible to get
through to him at all.
That
evening at our nightly staff meeting, I made my concerns about him known. I
explained to my fellow staff members my impression of him and asked them to pay
special attention and spend time with him when they could. The days I spend at
camp each year fly by faster than any others I have known. Thus, before I knew
it, mid-week had dissolved into the final night of camp and I was chaperoning
the "last dance." The students were doing all they could to savor
every last moment with their new "best friends" -- friends they would
probably never see again.
As I
watched the campers share their parting moments, I suddenly saw what would be
one of the most vivid memories of my life. The boy from under the tree, who
stared blankly out the kitchen window, was now a shirtless dancing wonder. He
owned the dance floor as he and two girls proceeded to cut up a rug. I watched
as he shared meaningful, intimate time with people at whom he couldn't even
look just days earlier. I couldn't believe it was him. In October of my
sophomore year, a late-night phone call pulled me away from my chemistry book.
A soft-spoken, unfamiliar voice asked politely, "Is Kevin there?"
"You're
talking to him. Who's this?"
"This
is Tom Johnson's mom. Do you remember Tommy from leadership camp?
The boy
under the tree. How could I not remember? "Yes, I do," I said.
"He's a very nice young man. How is he?"
An
abnormally long pause followed, then Mrs. Johnson said, "My Tommy was
walking home from school this week when he was hit by a car and killed."
Shocked, I offered my condolences.
"I
just wanted to call you," she said, "because Tommy mentioned you so
many times. I wanted you to know that he went back to school this fall with
confidence. He made new friends. His grades went up. And he even went out on a
few dates. I just wanted to thank you for making a difference for Tom. The last
few months were the best few months of his life."
In that
instant, I realized how easy it is to give a bit of yourself every day. You may
never know how much each gesture may mean to someone else. I tell this story as
often as I can, and when I do, I urge others to look out for their own
"boy under the tree."
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