I went through my Order of the Arrow "Ordeal" at long-gone Camp Hohobas across the Puget Sound from Tacoma, Washington, about 1967 or so -- Mount Rainier Council. We were allowed some plastic sheeting and our sleeping bags, and as we walked along a trail in the dark and the drizzle, a hand would touch your shoulder and point you right or left off the trail. You stumbled a few paces, spread your groundcloth and sleeping bag the best you could and crawled in. I remember being cold, wet, shivering and getting very little sleep -- in those days there was a lot of cotton flannel in most sleeping bags, worthless when wet.
Finally it began to get light and I could hear others dragging themselves out of their bags, putting on boots and seeing for the first time where they had slept. I had spent my wretched night among salal and last summer's bracken fern scattered under second-growth Doug fir. Silently, like zombies, we trudged down the trail and emerged at the camp headquarters, getting in line for the breakfast ordeal. And it was a cunningly conceived ordeal indeed. One guy handed you a paper cup full nearly to the top with scalding hot chocolate. The next guy placed a piece of toast on top of the cup. The third guy set the diabolical hard-boiled egg on top of the toast and then you had to walk a couple of hundred yards to the picnic tables where you could sit down and inhale your simple breakfast as only a famished young teenager can do.
Here is the Machiavellian twist: You have your big bundle of wet sleeping bag under your left arm and you are carrying your hot chocolate/toast/egg in your free hand and by the time you reach the tables to sit down, the hot chocolate has splashed and turned the toast soggy. It is a matter of time before the egg drops into the cup and the hot liquid splashes over your hand. I remember saying "Ouch" and was immediately censured for breaking the code of silence. I ate what I could salvage while waiting to learn what extra task I was to perform as penance for speaking.
As soon as I got home that afternoon, I peeled off my damp, smelly clothes and took one of the longest hot showers of my life. I'll never forget that OA Ordeal or the ingenious campcraft/wisdom that produced the chocolate toast and egg torture device. To this day, I live in horror of soggy toast.
That's my story, anyway.