Livingston, NJ (June 22, 2013) – Hundreds of NY Tri-State
area parents bid adieu to their children this morning in tony Livingston, New
Jersey. Dozens of camps’ buses littered
the parking lot on what is normally a quiet time for the area mall.
Camps were strategically placed throughout the 500 acre
parking lot. Camp Tyler Hill, one of
Pennsylvania’s more upscale camps, was set up in front of Lord & Taylor,
only after being denied a pick up spot by Neiman Marcus in The Mall at Short
Hills. Camp B’Nai Brith, a subsidized
Jewish federation camp with over 300 campers, was set up in front of the Sears
Automotive Center while other camps were scattered throughout.
Returning campers sprinted to reunite with old friends while
new campers could barely escape the vice-like grips of their overbearing Jewish
mothers. “I couldn’t let little Joshie
go,” cried Jen Horowitz, mother of Josh Horowitz of Camp Huron Lake. “He was
fighting me like a dog getting into a bathtub but I held on to his umbilical cor…um,
his arm as tight as I could. I let go
slightly when I noticed this hand turning blue.”
As mothers worried over who their children would sit next to
on the two-hour bus ride, fathers of now empty households quietly planned out
tee times and mid-day sex romps. “My
wife is crying her eyes out that Emily wasn’t sitting next to Amanda on the bus
so her summer was basically ruined. All
I kept thinking about is how I’ll be coming home from work getting undressed in
the car while Lori’ll be home cooking only in the apron Jake made her for
Mother’s Day 2008,” overexcitedly exclaimed Jon Goldstein, father of Jake
Goldstein.” Wife Lori quickly shot down
those ideas. “Shut up, you idiot. You know I don’t cook! Now wave to Jakey.”
The buses slowly rolled away starting at 11:00 am. As Camp Huron Lake’s two buses pulled out one
mother was seen chasing the chartered bus and leaping on to its exhaust
grids. “I’ve been training for the past
two months to take a run at the bus and the training paid off. I made it almost to the Barnes & Noble
before I couldn’t hold on any longer,” said Ellen Rabinowitz, mother of
first-time camper Alexis.
As the buses finally disappeared from sight, mother Jill
Silverstein, doing her best Oskar Schindler impression, broke down and cried
hysterically. “I could have packed
more. I could have got more. I don't know. If I'd just... I could have got
more.”
Husband Eric replied, “Jill, he’s got 20 toothbrushes and 80
pairs of socks!”
“If you made more money... You threw away so
much money on your golf membership and that stupid Lexus. You have no idea. If
you'd just... ““Jill, there will be generations of kids who won’t need toiletries because of what you bought.”
“ I didn't buy enough! “
“You bought so much.”
“This car. Someone would have bought this car. Why did I keep the car? Ten thousand more sticks of deodorant right there. Ten more pairs of socks. This engagement ring. Two thousand more graffiti sweatshirts. This is a gold bracelet. Three hundred more pairs of Sofee shorts. The lady at Zales would have given me two thousand dollars for it, at least one more personalized shirt.”
“I could have packed more... and I didn't! And I... I didn't! “
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