What I do that seems to work: Drink alot of alcohol!
QUOTE]

That just might be necessary (and I'm not a drinker!)
Lots of good advice here. I was thinking it would be easier if we all stay at the same resort, if we make a few ADR's together, and not try to stay together while in the parks. It looks like most of you are confirming that. Now if I can just get everyone else on board with that.
Like some of you guys, we've got folks who'll want to go commando, and folks who'll want to sleep in late, some like to eat sit-down, others prefer to eat on the run, etc. and I think all of that can be dealt with easily by just agreening that every family does what it likes and doesn't have to always be with the others. But the biggest bugaboo is going to be my mom, who always, no matter where we are,
always wants everyone to stay together, and she spends every moment worrying about whomever isn't with us. Drives us all crazy under normal circumstances; I can only imagine how bad it'll be for 14 days at WDW!!! Any ideas on how to get some sense ingrained into Granny on the wisdom of everyone doing their own thing? I was thinking maybe we should assign Granny and Papa to one family each day, and tell her she can keep track of everyone in that immediate family for the day (thereby giving the other families a break)?
Also, how has it worked for you to have some days, or partial days where, say, dads and boys go to a water park while moms and girls go to tea, or dads and bigger kids on E ticket rides while moms and little kids go to Fantasyland, or two couples take all the kids to Chef Mickeys while one couple goes on a date night? I'm thinking of working some combos like that into the itinerary for a little variety; just not sure how to actually pull it off.
As the planner in the family, I often feel like a reluctant cat herder (the cats being the reluctant ones, not me), kwim?