WendyMichaelJohn
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- May 10, 2005
- Messages
- 487
I just purchased access to two online itinerary planners. It is causing me more stress than I had before.
For example, not arriving at Dumbo first thing seems to be sacrilege. But my child doesn't want to do Dumbo first. I can only imagine what would happen if we started out our trip with me telling her, "No, you can't talk to that character, we have to get to Dumbo. No, you can't ride that ride, we have to get to Dumbo. No, we can't browse the Winnie the Pooh gift shop, we have to get to Peter Pan."
We're going at a moderate time of year (late nov/early dec.)
My feeling was to do things sort of by "land" at MK. We'll arrive early, do our best to move straight back to Fantasyland, but we didn't really want to start the day insisting, well, insisting ANYTHING. We do that all day long here at home and out and about. This is a vacation and I feel like we'd be setting ourselves up for a fight later if the day starts off with a million no's.
Why do I feel like these plans are just setting me up for fights and battles? And why are they making me feel like if we don't get to Dumbo first, all is lost?
Why can't I convince my children not to do the carousel first? (I'm not pushing the subject though. I want them to be excited.)
Anyway, one of the planners stresses a precise order for the rides first thing. It says that if you see a character, tell your kids you can see them later. But the truth is, from what I've read, that may not actually happen. They may NOT see them again later. And it appears to me that it would be not allowing magic to happen naturally, kwim?
Are we going to be alright just picking the right parks to go to, following itinerary advice loosely, and not stopping "magic" when it just happens?
Aaaaaah!
Shel
For example, not arriving at Dumbo first thing seems to be sacrilege. But my child doesn't want to do Dumbo first. I can only imagine what would happen if we started out our trip with me telling her, "No, you can't talk to that character, we have to get to Dumbo. No, you can't ride that ride, we have to get to Dumbo. No, we can't browse the Winnie the Pooh gift shop, we have to get to Peter Pan."
We're going at a moderate time of year (late nov/early dec.)
My feeling was to do things sort of by "land" at MK. We'll arrive early, do our best to move straight back to Fantasyland, but we didn't really want to start the day insisting, well, insisting ANYTHING. We do that all day long here at home and out and about. This is a vacation and I feel like we'd be setting ourselves up for a fight later if the day starts off with a million no's.
Why do I feel like these plans are just setting me up for fights and battles? And why are they making me feel like if we don't get to Dumbo first, all is lost?
Why can't I convince my children not to do the carousel first? (I'm not pushing the subject though. I want them to be excited.)
Anyway, one of the planners stresses a precise order for the rides first thing. It says that if you see a character, tell your kids you can see them later. But the truth is, from what I've read, that may not actually happen. They may NOT see them again later. And it appears to me that it would be not allowing magic to happen naturally, kwim?
Are we going to be alright just picking the right parks to go to, following itinerary advice loosely, and not stopping "magic" when it just happens?
Aaaaaah!
Shel