Sooooo funny! We have brought our girls once (planning another trip with them December 2013), but we have taken lots of trips by ourselves (no kids). So many times we are asked, "Isn't Walt Disney World just for kids? What do you even do?!"


Sometimes when I told people I was stationed in Korea they would ask "North or South?" Well, at least I should give them credit for knowing there are two.
My youngest daughter is adopted from S. Korea (dh and I are both caucasian). I get the "oh is she from North or South?" a lot.
Oh, and another favorite to overhear in the parks..."Are those real ducks or are they animatronic?![]()
lyra2007 said:OMG...i would love to see Cinderella rappelling down her castle. Seriously, how awesome would that be?
QueenQueso said:I was on the phone with her for an entire 12 minutes (which doesn't sound long, I know) and I have no idea where she was or where she wanted to go to, other than she did NOT want to go south and west, that's why she didn't call Southwest Airlines!![]()
Not everybody who asks the questions in this thread is "stupid". Stupidity is different from ignorance. I have two very intelligent friends who are university professors who told me in all seriousness that they had gone to Disney World, but had never been to Florida. I thought, of course, that they had meant they had gone to Disneyland, in California, since she is from S. Korea, and they both had worked as research scientists at Clorox, which is in the San Francisco area. But, asking more questions, I was able to determine that they had been to Magic Kingdom and Epcot. Not sure how to reconcile that Disney World is not in Florida; I give them the benefit of the doubt, and think they mean that they have never gone sightseeing in the rest of Florida, because the context was when I was discussing a trip we made to Sanibel.
People say funny, ignorant things to me, also. I am a family physician, and occasionally, I think I should have been keeping a list of things people have said/done in my office. The most ignorant scenario that I can recall (takes the prize for the past several years) was when I received a call from a nurse from a specialist's office in February telling me that a patient's family had returned an Apnea monitor the preceding October, and wanted to be sure the baby was OK. Well, I actually hadn't seen the child since the preceding August. So, my office contacted the family and learned that the family had moved from Indiana to Gainesville, Florida in October, and the child was being seen at Shands Hospital, which is the University hospital at the University of Florida. So, I assured her that the patient was under good, competent care. Her reply was "what is Shands hospital?". This story is incredible on so many levels, start with checking on a child with apnea issues 6 months after the fact.