When Marcy’s daughter joined the Girl Scouts in first grade,
Marcy didn’t know that it wasn’t only the start of her daughter’s Girl Scouting
experience. It was also the start of her own.
She started out as a parent volunteer in her daughter’s
troop. She remembers when they did an activity with jellybeans and the
girls thought it was the coolest thing. They used to get so excited over
everything when they were younger.
Around 2003, the troop leaders of her daughter’s Girl Scout
troop ceased being leaders, and Marcy and a few other parents took over as the leaders.
Marcy has led her troop as they have earned numerous patches
along with Journeys and awards. For their Bronze Award they gathered materials
which they placed into tubs called “troop tubs” for new troops. For their Silver Award they
redecorated and restored the Habitat for Humanity mural in Oxnard. A lot of the
girls in her troop are currently working on their Gold Awards.
Though camping is a huge Girl Scout tradition, Marcy calls
her troop “the Urban Troop” since they are more at home in a mall than in the
woods. They have camped a bit at Kaleidoscope and in other places, but not much
elsewhere.
At Kaleidoscope, they have directed the games workshop, and they enjoy doing the one pot cook-off there every time.
Marcy’s troop loves to cook. Besides the cook-off they have
also completed a badge about cooking around the world. They learned to cook Dutch-oven
style and participated in something called “Thinking Day”. During this Girl
Scout tradition of “Thinking Day” girls explore different cultures and their cuisines. Sometimes, her troop also has the urge to spontaneously whip up baked goods like
fresh brownies and cookies for their meetings.
Besides being adept at edible crafts, they are also good at
handicrafts. They have done many over the years, including making newspaper
beads and inventive S.W.A.P.S (Small Whatchamacallits Affectionately Pinned Somewhere).
As Marcy and her troop have changed and passed through the
different stages of Girl Scouts, Girl Scouts has also changed. The Journeys
have evolved to help girls explore the world as they follow a story arc that is
concluded with an award at the end instead of a "scatter-shot" of badges. The
Journeys are much deeper compared to what they used to be.
Marcy and her troop are also interested in the state of the
world. They recently went on a field trip to see an exhibit for the documentary Half the Sky. She believes that Girl Scouts has been in sync with the Women’s Rights Movement all along. Juliette Lowe was pretty
radical in her day about what equals women’s rights and what women ought to be.
Marcy states that what she mostly sees in girls that come
out of Girl Scouts is confidence. Confidence in the way they handle themselves
and how they live. "It doesn’t matter how many badges or how much experience
they have had, above all, they exude confidence."
She says that part of what drew her to Girl Scouts are the
character vows of being honest and being a sister to every Girl Scout (as part of the Girl Scout Promise and Law states).
Marcy has been with her daughter’s troop since the Brownie
days and has helped them along starting as a parent volunteer and then being a
leader through out the years, in addition she also holds a position in the Girl Scout Organization as a Learning Facilitator and Gold Award Committee Chair.
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