Planning a family vacation poses some
interesting challenges. Your 4-year-old might be delighted to spend three days
exploring the wonders of a tacky Santa's Village, whereas you develop a
migraine after a couple of hours. You may relish the thought of spending a day
at an art museum; your child would last an hour before collapsing in a puddle
of boredom.
Here are some
family vacation suggestions that can make the trip more enjoyable for both
generations:
- Break up
the day. Remember
that children are often most excited by simple and familiar pleasures.
Spend two hours playing miniature golf if that's something your child
likes, even if there's a similar course close to your home. Build a small
sand castle with a plastic bucket and shovel. Don't focus on elaborate
adventures.
- Keep
sightseeing trips short. A two-hour cruise on a harbor will be far more
interesting to a young child than an all-day bus tour.
- Budget for
time apart. Have your hotel arrange for a babysitter for an evening
or two so that you can get some adults-only time. Don't feel that you have
to do something exotic or dramatic; sometimes what you really need is a
few quiet hours.
- Keep your
schedule loose. Young children
operate on their own time schedules. If your child's cranky in the
afternoon, be willing to scrap your prearranged plans so that he (and
perhaps you) can take a nap.
- Travel
when the kids are tired. This varies from child to child. Some young children can
be plopped down in a car or an airplane at 6 am and stay asleep for hours.
Others wake up instantly. You may find that the best time for driving is
during an afternoon nap — your child¡¯s, not yours!
- Try
staying in one location for
the whole vacation. This reduces the number of new things your child has
to adapt to, which lowers your stress level as well.
- Allow lots
of extra time at airports. These days, traveling by air can make a family vacation
very stressful, especially for young children. The frustration of a missed
connection increases exponentially with every child who's with you.
- Monitor
your own emotions and
attitude. Our children reflect our feelings in their own emotions. If we
become upset, they'll become upset. If we're laid back in the face of a
problem, they're more likely to handle things the same way.
Try to follow
these tips without stressing too much on creating a perfect experience for all.
Some days will be better for you and others better for your child. That¡¯s just
the way things work on a family vacation.
|