Local Book Clubs Celebrate Halloween Together

Last Saturday, more than 70 Next Chapter Book Club members, volunteers, family and friends from 13 local clubs attended the 2024 NCBC Halloween Party. What a fun time we had!

Guests enjoyed mini-bowling, pumpkin painting, and a variety of activities at Woodlands Backyard in Grandview. Lunch included pizza, wings, salad, chips, and buckets of Halloween candy, as well as delightful and delicious party favors.

There was tough competition in the costume contest. In the end, the Scary Corpse Bride, Funny Angry Bird, Cute fairy, and Creative Mary Poppins costumes won the top prizes.

Thank you all for making this event so much fun. If you attended the party, please give us your feedback by taking a short survey HERE.

Scroll down to check out photos from the event…

Two party guests dressed as Harry Potter

Christine and Colin make two great Harry Potters

 

Two people, one in a Mini Mouse costume, smile for the camera

Sisters Lisa and Janie smile for the camera

 

One guest dressed as Waldo and another dressed as a chef

Friends Eric and Peter are dressed as Waldo and Chef Linguini from Ratatouille

 

People in costumes, one holding a sign that says "Scariest"

Debbie, Amy, and Christina during the contest for scariest costume

 

Four people in festive Halloween outfits eat lunch

Tammy, Jay, Bek, and Lori enjoy lunch

 

Two friends stand in front of the bar and smile for the camera

Friends Austin and Julian smile for the camera

 

Two party guests sit at a table smile for the camera

Bethany and Kelsie chatting

 

A group of party guests lean in and smile for the camera

Ashley, Sara, Joe, Carol, David, and Elizabeth enjoy lunch together

 

Two people decorating pumpkins

Jeff and his staff have fun decorating pumpkins

 

Four guests in costumes sit in front of the mini-bowling lanes

Jackie, Lisa, Mandy, and Avery watch mini-bowling

 

A group of book club members eat their lunch and smile for the camera

Kristin, Aly, and Nate enjoy lunch

 

A woman with mouse ears gives two thumbs up

Roxy gives the party two thumbs up

 

Volunteer smiles for the camera next to a table with chips and drinks

Nichele stops by to visit with friends and enjoy the festivities

 

Backpacking, Camping and Endurance Sports by Kerry P

How can outdoor, wilderness, and endurance activities help neurodiverse young adults find (or even regain) their confidence?

When going on primitive hiking and camping trips, one is closer to the natural world. Scientific studies have recently proven that being out in nature is healing, grounding, even enlightening, and not just for the neurodivergent either. All can benefit!

You’ll learn to live and work together as a team with others, hopefully several that share your interests. Also, you gain great physical strength and endurance! Today, just about everyone’s way out of shape, and Covid didn’t do much to help it.

I want to give my own examples, stemming from my own experiences. On my first trip ever hiking over mountains (about a mile away from now hurricane-stricken Asheville!) I could hardly catch my breath at all. I was not accustomed to any of this. But I held out. And by the next summer…I was pretty much ahead of everyone else. Not to brag, but this goes to show how being out in nature, combined with pushing yourself with strenuous physical activity, sleeping outside under tarps, and cooking over fires, can give one a burst of confidence like nothing ever before.

I’m not dissing ordinary team sports. Soccer, basketball, baseball, hockey, etc. are all great, and also terrific confidence boosters. (I will say that even when I was small, my late grandfather would always be in awe of my basketball dribbling skills…AND HE HAD BEEN A COACH…not to mention that I succeeded in landing a three-point shot on only my second ever try.)

However, team sports are not something that neurodiverse people should be pushed into. Sporty parents and family members may have to think out the box, and realize that the talents of the neurodiverse may lie elsewhere…and this is where outdoor and endurance activities, as a matter of fact anything solo, may come into play. Hiking, backpacking, trail running, hunting, fishing, etc. could be way more where it’s at for certain groups and individuals than team sports are.

And yes – in independent outdoor sports, you still socialize, to give society a peace of mind! And you learn to work together as a team…all in less of a forced, pressured way. You’re far from isolated! And as a matter of fact, communication skills are really amped up for many, more so than they would be in team sports. It’s all just more natural, for lack of a better term.

Getting away from the noise and bustle of the cities, and soaking in the natural world. That’s more or less been lauded as a healing balm for many neurodivergent people…more so than loud, crowded, pressured team sports. Team sports are “where it’s at” for much of our society…but solo sports are just as, if not more in many ways, intense and challenging. And they benefit the neurodiverse greatly. I should know. And they even lead to new interests. Thanks to my old camp, I am now involved in search and rescue and wilderness medicine…and hope to open a secondary school to teach neurodiverse young adults outdoor, wilderness, and emergency skills…self-advocacy on the side!