ceecee
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2001
- Messages
- 10,478
No they don't....not always. Mine has been gone for 4 years, her daughter is 3, she's been home twice in that time. They don't always come home.
That's sad! I'm sorry for you.

No they don't....not always. Mine has been gone for 4 years, her daughter is 3, she's been home twice in that time. They don't always come home.
my thoughts are not going to be popular with the budget crowd. Putting flame suit on.
I say do Disney. Your oldest is getting old. How many more family vacations will you go on before he/she is out of the house? You have been through a lot lately and I say you deserve a trip!
Save for the house when you come back. Do a totally budget trip. Drive, stay cheap hotel, buy park tickets through the YES program if you can go at a time when they offer classes for your kids to attend. You can do a trip for cheap and still have a great time.
Sarah
Same opinion here. You sound like you are doing great and are responsible. I believe you have to be financially responsible, but you also don't want to look back on your kids growing up and always wish you could have those years back to do things. Time passes very quickly and then it is gone and can't be gotten back. Do the vacation that you have saved for, stay within your budget and cherish those memories forever! Cut other places to make it work, it can be done. Good Luck!my thoughts are not going to be popular with the budget crowd. Putting flame suit on.
I say do Disney. Your oldest is getting old. How many more family vacations will you go on before he/she is out of the house? You have been through a lot lately and I say you deserve a trip!
Save for the house when you come back. Do a totally budget trip. Drive, stay cheap hotel, buy park tickets through the YES program if you can go at a time when they offer classes for your kids to attend. You can do a trip for cheap and still have a great time.
Sarah
Have you checked out Websites like couponingtodisney.com? She teaches how to "find" money to pay for Disney trips. Maybe you can save for your house and go on a trip!
I don't think this is a question anyone can answer for you. It depends on what you want more.
#1- to own a home
or
#2- annual trips to Disney
A lot of people are perfectly happy renting their whole lives.
A lot of people want to be homeowners.
Neither is right or wrong.
If you want #1- skip anything that will take away from saving as much money as possible to make it a reality.
If you want #2-go, have fun and don't feel bad about it.
I have not. I will check it out!!
From reading....everyone seems to be on the same page as me. I really want my own home...but after 5 years from being at WDW I don't want to wait so long to go again. I really love going on vacation. Just trying to figure out how to have my cake and eat it too
I've been trying to figure that out also for the last 50 years.
Go to Disney with your kids, or become a burden on your kids?
I'd assume that with the financial situation implied in the OP, you aren't looking at having half a mil in a retirement account already. I do believe balance is important in life, you can't always be an ant - sometimes you need to be a grasshopper. But if your financial situation is anything like what I think it may be like - Disney isn't balance - you need to find a cheaper way to indulge the grasshopper.
Good analogy! But I don't think a cheap ($2000-3000) Disney vacation would make her a burden to her kids in retirement. She may have to wait a while longer on the house purchase though.
I should mention...I have been back to work for 2 years..so I am not rushing into a trip or anything. I made sure I was back to somewhat normal before I planned this trip. I am more thinking of June 5th when I am back home...how I should save going forward.
I like the coupon thing and we are already using the coin jar..I use my debit card most of the time and my bank is no longer giving me reward points![]()
A lot of people on DISBoards (not pointing fingers at anyone on this thread, but just saying in general) seem to view annual Disney trips as a right and necessity. You're going on one trip in a few weeks and that is AWESOME, but it might be time to start putting away money for something else, once you get home.
That said, only you can decide what your priorities are and how to spend your money. If taking your kids on nice trips before they leave home is a priority to you, then that's your decision. There's nothing wrong with that.
Good analogy! But I don't think a cheap ($2000-3000) Disney vacation would make her a burden to her kids in retirement. She may have to wait a while longer on the house purchase though.