WanderLit
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2015
- Messages
- 109
(Brace yourself, I'm getting all sappy in this post.)
I'm about to take my daughter and granddaughter on a Disney Cruise. We're doing the Western Caribbean on the Fantasy leaving on my granddaughter's 5th birthday June 11th. I booked a year ago and, at the time, had no idea what we would all be going through during the wait for our cruise. It's been heartbreaking and we all need a little Disney magic.
My daughter is in the middle of a divorce and broke her leg two weeks ago. My granddaughter's other grandma lost her fight with breast cancer and my own parents were just in an accident three months ago while vacationing out-of-state. My mother was killed and my father seriously injured. My sister and I flew down to him and spent a month making my mother's final arrangements and caring for Dad until he was well enough to travel the slow, sad trip home with Mom's remains.
I'm not mentioning all of this for sympathy. I'm mentioning it because at 47 years old, I feel sad and jaded. I long for the simplicity and safety of my own happy childhood... back when I still believed in fairies. I want my daughter to feel that her world is still full of wondrous possibilities as my granddaughter discovers the joy of Disney dreams coming true.
I'm not an experienced Disney adventurer but I'm more than willing to throw myself into the Disney experience and am open to the magic of being a child again. This is where you all come in. Can you help?
What Disney Cruise experiences do you recommend for a couple of sad wounded adults who want to return to a state of child-like innocence and wonder again? (even for just a week.)
I'm about to take my daughter and granddaughter on a Disney Cruise. We're doing the Western Caribbean on the Fantasy leaving on my granddaughter's 5th birthday June 11th. I booked a year ago and, at the time, had no idea what we would all be going through during the wait for our cruise. It's been heartbreaking and we all need a little Disney magic.
My daughter is in the middle of a divorce and broke her leg two weeks ago. My granddaughter's other grandma lost her fight with breast cancer and my own parents were just in an accident three months ago while vacationing out-of-state. My mother was killed and my father seriously injured. My sister and I flew down to him and spent a month making my mother's final arrangements and caring for Dad until he was well enough to travel the slow, sad trip home with Mom's remains.
I'm not mentioning all of this for sympathy. I'm mentioning it because at 47 years old, I feel sad and jaded. I long for the simplicity and safety of my own happy childhood... back when I still believed in fairies. I want my daughter to feel that her world is still full of wondrous possibilities as my granddaughter discovers the joy of Disney dreams coming true.
I'm not an experienced Disney adventurer but I'm more than willing to throw myself into the Disney experience and am open to the magic of being a child again. This is where you all come in. Can you help?
What Disney Cruise experiences do you recommend for a couple of sad wounded adults who want to return to a state of child-like innocence and wonder again? (even for just a week.)
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