Share a Disney memory from your past...

HMGar

Mouseketeer
Joined
Mar 1, 2009
Messages
275
It all started when I was just a girl. My obsession with Disneyland/WDW began with our yearly summer trips while mom and dad were still together. We lived in California. My dad was a school teacher and mom stayed at home to care for my twin sister and me. We weren't wealthy or even comfortably middle class. We struggled (although as a kid I wasn't aware of this), but somehow we managed to pull together enough money for a yearly summer vacation to Disneyland.

My parents were the ones who instilled the routine that I still use today for my own family vacations. We were up bright and early for rope drop, took a few hours to rest in the afternoon, and back to the park until closing. These were some of my happiest childhood memories.

I will share a specific one that still makes me smile today.

It's 1975. My sister and I are 8 years old and we are up early for our first Disneyland day. Disneyland didn't have the resort experience that WDW has today where you eat at a nice counter service restaurant and then hop on a bus to the park. We stayed at a modest motel outside of the park and always ate our breakfast once we got to Disneyland.

Today was no different than other mornings. We decided to stop at the Carnation Restaurant in Frontierland, right across from the Pirates of the Carribean. They served Mickey Mouse pancakes there. Although pancakes were not my breakfast of choice on most days, I couldn't resist the cute edible Mickey head with raisins for eyes and a pineapple mouth. We sat at a window seat with a wonderful view of the front of PotC. My sister and I quicky ate our breakfast, eagerly eyeing the que of the Pirates of the Carribean. It was among our top three rides at the time, and always a first stop for our family.

As we sat there with empty plates in front of us, we were relieved that mom and dad were also nearly done with their breakfasts. We knew that PotC was only minutes away, maybe even seconds. Then....Dad gets up from his seat as if to clear his tray. But rather than clearing the table, he refills his coffee cup! Mom does the same! And they sit down as if they are ready to relax for a while while gleefully sipping coffee!! My sister and I panic. "The line is getting longer! Let's go!" No, they were going to sit there and enjoy their coffee. My sister and I now become not only frantic, but aggitated that the silly adults want to do something that they can do ANYWHERE! We begged and pleaded with them to quickly drink their steaming hot cups of coffee, all the while making sure that they noticed the growing que across from us.

They torture us for a minute or so longer (it felt like hours) and then tell us to ride PotC once without them and then they'll join us for another run when we get off. What great news! We were let go to enjoy Disneyland without an adult!

I don't know why that memory sticks in my mind, but it's one of my favorites. I think it was the first time that sis and I were allowed to go off on our own a bit, and it was freeing knowing that we could go do something that we really wanted to do without rushing mom and dad who just wanted to relax like adults sometimes like to do.

Do any of you have a childhood memory you'd like to share?
 
Oh this could be a very fun topic!

The first time I went to Disney World, though I always wanted to go, was on my honeymoon in 1990. I'll never forget walking into the lobby of the Grand Floridian (yes, that's where we stayed!) and looking up....then saying to my husband "this can't be where we're staying" and him smiling and saying "yes, it is!"

20plus years and four kids later, we're still enjoying the magic!
 
My favorite memory is my DD's first trip at 4yo and having to carry her on my shoulders because she was "too tired to walk", it wasn't always fun carrying her then, but looking back it is a great memory!
 
My first trip to WDW was in 1971 -- I was nineteen. My family was, to put it simply, poor. I did well in high school and had a 2 yr associates degree by that time. Actually got a job with a good company and Disney was my first real vacation. My love of Disney was a partial motivator to do more so I could come back again and again to such a fun and magical place as well as other wonderful places in the world. I've advanced my education and career since that time, but the roots were that first trip to Disney. It just opened my eyes to possibilities.
 

One of my fond memories is when my brother and I went to Epcot for the very first time in '83. I remember we were at the WS, and I wasn't even planning to check out Mexico, but we ended up running in there because it started to pour. We waited out the storm. We ended up taking the boat ride inside and browse around the inside market. We actually enjoyed Mexico!

Everything was new to us and we were just awed by everything!! We fell in love with Epcot! We took our time checking out everything there is to see at Epcot. Our favorite ride was and still is, Spaceship Earth. :)
 
1989 - first trip - I was 8 years old!

Late in the day and we hadn't eaten, and my family was checking out the menu at King Stefan's (which is now Cinderella's Royal Table), which we didn't end up eating there or anything.

But anyhow, they were up at the podium looking at the menu and I was just standing around and Cinderella came up and started to talk with me - keep in mind that back then, the characters just walked around and mingled, no lines like today! I remember I could not even speak, she was just so beautiful!! I just kept staring at her!!! LOL! She made me promise to drink a glass of milk for her, and all I could do was nod, I still could not speak!

To this day, whenever I drink milk, I think of Cinderella! :lmao: How random is that??
 
In 2000 I finally returned to THE WORLD, waiting since a family vacation in 1978. It was Myself, DH and kids DS7, and DD10 along with my sister, mom and dad. We stayed at the Polynesan. After check-in I remember my dad and DH and kids getting on the monorail , going to MK and walking into MK.:wizard::wizard: Is there any other felling like that...it was what I had been waiting for...forever. We ate at Caseys and the first ride we did was It's a Small World. Then over to Pirates of the Carribean. Got back on the monorail to meet back with mom and sis at Poly.
But the night we all were back in MK and saw Disney's Electrical Parade, I literally started crying with JOY, the memories of that were so overwhelming. I remember having to explain to the kids "mom's really, really happy right now":cloud9::cloud9:.

So of course when that parade came back in 2010 and I got to see it again after 10 years the same thing happened. I cried for the JOY of it. It's only a parade with catchy music but it exemplfies everything I love and remember of my childhood in DisneyWorld.
 
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I have so many memories over the past 35 years. BUT, I have a great memory from back in 1977. Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee got in a water fight with my cousins and me! This was before the days of "lines" to meet the characters. It was a very spontaneous and memorable experience, as we all literally threw water at each other gathered from a water fountain, and this went on for quite awhile. Tweedle Dum and Dee were quite the instigators! (::rotfl2:
 
I've been to WDW three times: in 1973 (as a 3-year old), in the early 1980s (when my younger brother was about 6, I'm not sure EPCOT had been built yet), and in 1990 (spring break trip on the cheap with college friends).

I don't really remember anything from the first trip except through pictures. The second trip my favorite rides were the Wedway People Mover and If You Had Wings. I also remember my parents forcing me to ride Space Mountain and I had to sit in the front of our car/rocket because the park required the smallest riders to sit there. Bloody terrifying. I hated roller coasters for at least 20 yeas after that. Of course now DS(5) has loved every roller coaster he's ridden.

When I went in 1990 we drove in a caravan from New Orleans to a friend's house in Orlando. One of the drivers got lost because she missed the intersection of I-10 and I-75 in Lake City and it took almost an hour to raise her on the CB (man, communication was rough in the pre-cell phone days). Part of my motivation for going was that I had romantic designs on one of the girls in our group. She turned out to be completely flaky and uninterested, so to spite her I wound up pairing off with her friend, who was also on the trip (we dated for a few months). Lesson learned: it's never a good idea to enter into a relationship to spite someone else. :teacher:

On the lighter side, one of the guys in our group tried (unsuccessfully) to pick up one of the waitresses at the Norwegian restaurant. :rotfl2:
 

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