Family
holidays were easy when the kids were little. Well, not easy exactly. By the time I’d finished packing I’d be utterly
exhausted (although Jimmy could never understand why I made such a big deal out
of preparing for a trip. ‘You should be like me,’ he gloated. ‘A couple of
T-shirts and a pair of shorts and you’re done.’).
I would have
laughed - bitterly - had I not been busy packing a million items of kids' clothing,
toys, board games, DVDs and inflatable tortoises, plus all the medical stuff for
every possible emergency, which apparently we didn't need - because just a couple of T-shirt and a pair
of shorts and you're done.
Anyway, once
we were away on some gorgeous beach, all my stresses would melt away. The kids were
happy to run in and out of water all day. But it's been a long time since
anyone collected razor shells or dabbled about in rock pools. The pic above was last summer, when we rented a house near Pollensa in Majorca and took our three teens, plus three of their friends - it was brilliant. The kids totally took over the barbecue and we barely did a thing (apart from Jimmy, who drove the terrifying 9-seater car around mountain roads). But this year, everyone is doing their own thing, or being taken away by friends' families. So Jimmy and I are going
away on our own.
Just the two
of us! We haven't done this for eighteen years. I'm sort of bereft and delighted. Last kid-free holiday we still
used travellers' cheques and took about five minutes to pack (camera,
Birkenstocks, pants). We didn't have mobile phones or any other twittering gadgets. So it all feels quite different this time. It took about six months to decide what to do, the choice was so boggling. And now I wonder what
we'll talk about for a whole week. Also, we're so excited I
worry we'll over-schedule ourselves and either do too much or too little. And it'll
be odd, lying on a beach with no one kicking sand all over the food or trying
to bury us. And how will we amuse ourselves without running off for ice cream and snacks?
Still, it'll be interesting to wander around
crumbly old towns without being annoyed because the kids aren't enjoying it
enough. We won't be shouting, 'Look at that church. Why aren't you appreciating
it? We might as well be at home!'
There'll be
no one moaning if we suggesting going to see some Boring Art, or demanding
lobster off the menu when we stop for a quick lunch. 'No, you can't have the lobster, I hate to be mean - but it is £800.' The holiday house
cleaner won't drive after us in a furious rage to the airport, due to a grubby
handprint on a bedroom wall - as happened to us in Corsica. We won't be fined
for shoving a glass down the inner workings of the pool ('I was trying to trap
ants!') - as happened in Sicily. No one will perch on a radiator and accidentally
pull it off the wall (Brittany) or puke in the hire car (everywhere). We will not have to park a big suitcase in front of the dent in the hire car when we return it, which happened because everyone was shouting in the back and Jimmy reversed into a pillar.
Also, no
one will look disgusted at the sight of us in our bathing wear. At least, no
one who knows us. I can't bloody wait.
Your last para made me laugh out loud...my kids find me revolting in anything less than an astronaut's suit...I'm envious...and totally relate to lobster and getting furious because kids not appreciating it all enough!
ReplyDeleteHaha love the astronaut's suit... yes, we are truly hideous to them. I will miss them though (a bit...) - bet you will too when the time comes. x
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