JLTraveling
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2005
- Messages
- 2,709
From my perspective: spending a full week with someone day and night (and gifting them with a thousand dollar or more trip) is not something that you do for a casual friend or someone you are just beginning to get really close to. I would only want to commit that kind of money and time to a kid I knew my child had a history of being able to be with for long periods (also because maybe the new friend will be out by the time January rolls around and after finally payment you really can't change WHO is going without very good reason--like a medical issue with a paper trail). I would also want to have enough experience around the child to know that I could stand her around for the entire week on MY vacation, know that i could trust her, etc. I would want to have a strong relationship with the child's parents and feel I knew where we stood with them and could work everything out.
So to me, if they have been fast friends for a long time and this was planned that is okay. If the friendship breaks up (for whatever reason or no reason at all) and the child prefers to go with only family that is okay too. But the child does not get to pick and choose just anyone to come along (and be paid for) on EVERYONE'S vacation and be fickle about the invites and change things around later. Maybe on a future trip--if another close friend is involved in the girl's life then she can take someone else--but not this trip this late in the game.
That would be my approach and reasoning anyway.
ITA with this entire post. My father and I brought my adult cousin and her husband down for a two-week Disney trip last year. She and I had been like sisters when we were kids, but hadn't spent a lot of time together in the past few years. We knew the husband, kind of, but hadn't spent much time with him. The entire trip was a DISASTER, and they're both in their late 20s. Not no way, not no how would I pay for even half of a trip for a new BFF. You all have to live with this new child for a week, and you personally have to take responsibility for her on a ship/in foreign countries. Way too many things that could go wrong. I agree that if DD develops a new BFF over time, then there's no reason not to take her on a future trip. But doing it now, for this trip? That's just asking for trouble. It's also teaching your daughter that she gets to control the family vacations (like you said, you don't want to hear her whine until January. She knows this and knows she can push your buttons and get you to cave in). It sets a dangerous precedent IMO.

Especially 14 year olds who think going on a cruise without the a friend is boring and not fair and worth whining over
.