ipdraughts.wordpress.com |
HOLIDAYS are funny things, aren’t they? Events that are saved up for all year round
and then over and done with in a speedy week.
As for the vomit inducing anticipation followed by lack of sleep with
massive excitement in the immediate run up to it. Then it’s hard to settle into holiday mode as
the office takes up too much head space.
Before you know it, the clothes that were so carefully laid out and
packed 7 days ago, are being balled up and stuffed back into the suitcases.
You might also experience some, if not all of, the
following:
Are we nearly
there? The final destination is a
whole hour and forty minutes away not including the obligatory stop to get
something to eat. A recent study has
revealed the average child will ask that question approximately 27 times before
you arrive.
There is way too much
eating and drinking. But you are, after all, on holidays and everyone
knows weight that is gained over a short period of time will also be lost quickly. At least, it better!
Sun burn can happen
even on a cloudy day. Particularly if you are on a beach. Wear that sun block! You can only blame yourself if you neglect to
apply it to your own skin but if one of the kids gets overlooked, then you do
not deserve for the lovely lady in the pharmacy to be so nice and say, “these
things happen.” Yes, I am talking about
my child.
There will be
tears. Small kids have no concept of
time and how long a week really is. They
might get upset and ask to go home. Home
to their dog. This usually happens at about
2am.
Sand is bat shit
crazy. The stuff gets
everywhere. In your hair. In your clothes. God, in your clothes. In your bed.
In your food. If you wait long enough or have drink taken and watch
some, it will actually move in your direction.
Try it.
her.ie |
Before you know it,
there will be a clothes shortage. Despite
packing 11 sports bags containing shorts and t-shirts, by mid-week the kids
have worn all of the clothes into the water.
You will be stopping complete strangers for directions to the nearest
Penneys to buy some more. You are on
holidays FFS and refuse to turn on a washing machine. The laundrette costs a fortune. Then, when you do source the nearest Penneys, all the autumn/winter stuff is in which
means there isn’t a shorts or t-shirt available for love nor money.
The respectable beach
villa takes on the look of a hippy commune.
All of the clothes and beach towels are strung up and over banisters,
the dividing wall in the garden, the tiny clothes line and every available
chair in the house. Stiff with
sand.
Wine tastes nicer by
the sea. Or in the sea.
The local Centra is a
Mecca. It stocks everything from
mouse traps to kids flip flops, postage stamps, tin openers and absolutely
everything else in between. All at a
horrendously marked up price.
There will be plenty
of early wake-ups. Resulting in
yours being the only family on the beach at 7am. Guaranteed.
And then the initial all-consuming surge of adrenalin called holiday
excitement wears off. They crash and
burn. Hard.
You will meet someone
you know. It might be 15 years since
you last saw them, it could be your granny’s next door neighbour's cousin, or even the
consultant who inserted your kid’s grommets.
Doesn’t matter. It will be
someone you know from somewhere.
You will forget to
bring something. Enough clothes
perhaps. Maybe even baby wipes. And you will find something. Possibly an entire outfit since last years
holiday left in the holiday bag. You
will also lose something. A child for a
heart stopping two minutes on the beach or your sanity.
After the first three
days it feels like you have been there forever.
The kids have made friends with the youngsters next door and you
know exactly where to go for the best coffee and cheapest bottle of wine.
You tell strangers
the oddest things. They only have to
be tying their shoe laces and you’re informing them a beach holiday is all you
can hope for really whenyouhavekids. But
you’d give anything to be able to escape for a cup of coffee or a glass of wine
in the evenings.
fayedodgeszombies.com |
You buy 7 postcards
in the Mecca of Centras. Chosen with considerable care, witty holiday
observations are penned as you dine in the bistro bar. Then they are stuck inside your holiday read and
you end up bringing them home with you. Stamps
and all on them.
There will be at
least one injury. A thorn imbedded
in a small foot, a stubbed toe resulting in some toenail being ripped off. A sibling receiving a thump from another,
someone tripping on the stairs.
You will come home
with more crap stuff than you went with.
Buckets and shovels, if left unattended, will get it on and
reproduce. Fact!
And then on your
return home:
You have The Fear. For the 3 year guarantee on your washing
machine. There is no way it will be able
to cope with all the sand that got packed into the 11 sports bags. This time you don’t have a problem visiting
the laundrette.
whitbyfishmonger.co.uk |
You never want to see
a fresh cod and chips again. Imagine,
the thoughts of switching on that oven and peeling a few spuds for a roast
something dinner is positively appealing.
The dog is ecstatic
at seeing everyone again. She wee’s
all over everything at the sight of her humans.
You may even shed a small tear yourself.
It’s great to be
home. Within an hour it’s as if you
were never away. And there’s nothing
quite like a cup of tea from your own kettle in your own kitchen.
Who cares that there are 11 sports bags to be unpacked, that the
buckets and shovels appear to have spawned overnight and there is a random kite
in the mix. How did that get there? The dish
cloth is fit for the bin because it wasn’t left in a detergent and there’s no
milk. Some seventy million fruit flies
are having a party with the bananas in the fruit bowl and someone forgot to
flush the downstairs loo before you left.
A week ago.
Everyone is home. The
sun burn is now a peeling special effect, tan lines are evident and the kids
begin to fight. Because they’re bored.
But everyone agrees it was the best holiday ever!
Sounds like a typical family holiday with kids! It gets easier with teens, in some ways. And I too hate sand....ugh! xx
ReplyDeleteSand and glitter. Am going to get a petition organised to ban both of them!
Delete