DakotaRose
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2012
- Messages
- 514
Sometimes, you know how it's going to go. Sixteen people in a lovely rental house. The adults had all been to WDW twice before having kids, about 15 years ago. They had no time/interest in reading up on it. Besides that, some genius told them the week of Thanksgiving is really quiet at WDW. They would just get up whenever and be able to experience what interested them with little or no wait. And they would travel light -- strollers for the baby and two-year old, but the four and five year olds could walk. I tried to gently help, really, explaining that crowds might be bigger than they think, what rides to FP, etc. They didn't make use of the tips or touring suggestions I printed for them, nor did they believe me about crowds. 
house - way too much togetherness, got on each other's nerves
crowds - whoa! and lines were crazy long
kids - exhausted and whiny
grandpa - crabby and demanding
my friend - frazzled from all the cooking, picking up, trying to keep people happy while her brothers and sis-in-law's sat around and bickered
It's frustrating. There were probably 50 other extended families with similar setups having a great time. I'm learning that it's not a lack of planning that ruins a trip, but rather a whole series of decisions that mean less convenience, more work, less know-how, more waiting, more stress, less ideal, less enjoyment.

house - way too much togetherness, got on each other's nerves
crowds - whoa! and lines were crazy long
kids - exhausted and whiny
grandpa - crabby and demanding
my friend - frazzled from all the cooking, picking up, trying to keep people happy while her brothers and sis-in-law's sat around and bickered
It's frustrating. There were probably 50 other extended families with similar setups having a great time. I'm learning that it's not a lack of planning that ruins a trip, but rather a whole series of decisions that mean less convenience, more work, less know-how, more waiting, more stress, less ideal, less enjoyment.