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That is the exact opposite of the way DH and I feel. We wished our parents had taken us out of the country growing up, and now that we did that on our own a few times, we are looking forward to taking our kids when they get older. We decided we'd rather travel than have a bunch of things. Or some gigantic house. And for the pps mentioning spending so much money on a beach vacation- I agree! I can't believe how much it costs to rent a house for a week at the beach. I guess that's why we haven't done that yet! |
Wait, aren't you the same PP who just said upthread that you hope your daughter inherits your same love of people around the world????? How ironic. Do you similarly cringe at the people you meet on your far-flung travels who also cannot afford to travel? You ARE and elitist, snobby bitch. |
I am not the PP that mentioned my daughter. You can have your impression of me and I can have mine of other people. That's what makes us all different. |
Keep saying that and maybe you'll convince yourself. |
And yet with all of those friends and all of those worldly experiences, here you are trolling DCUM on a Friday night with the rest of us. Or perhaps you are posting from Bangladesh? |
Everyone I know who is constantly running around the world has no reason to stay home. Also, always loved the old Death Cab song: I think that it's brainless to assume that making changes to your window's view will give a new perspective |
Yes, I know people like this! They go on and on about how they had the best sushi in Japan, the best pizza in Italy, blah blah. You really can't know the culture of a country unless you've lived there. Seeing the Eiffel Tower in person does not make you cultured. It makes you a tourist. |
I traveled six continents when I was single and poor as dirt. In Vietnam, I stayed in beautiful inns that were $12 US dollars a night. Equador was mind blowing, and family friend. Very dirty and not like anything I had ever experienced. Maybe that is why I liked it. I got to experience it.
I have done the math, and it would cost us more to do Disney than it would for me to take my now young family to some of these places. Costa Rica is AMAZING for families, and if you do it right (I also get emails about travel deals), it can be done *cheaply*. That said, I realize that most family budgets right now can't include travel. But if it does, don't feel you are limited to the continental United States. |
I think you quoted the wrong poster.
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What makes you an elitist, classist jerk is the fact that you can't/won't see that lots of people can't afford to travel abroad. On this thread alone I've seen several people say they want to travel, but can't. Sorry, but the Delaware beach house comparison is ludicrous - at max you're paying $3,000, which is going to be less than the cost of hauling a family of four to Costa Rica, and then supporting them there for a week or two. And to the person who talked about $12 stays in Vietnam, how long ago was that, and would you really take your kids to the sort of places we all stayed in during college travel? At least multiply it by the number of people in your family, so you get $48. I've lived in Europe and travelled extensively in Asia, Central and South America. Some of this was on my own dime, and some of it was for work. If I ever start sounding like you, re people who can't AFFORD to travel as I have, please shoot me. |
Please explain the math:
A beach house for max $2,000-$3,000 (less if you share, and many are available for $1,500 if you're willing to live a few blocks away from the beach) vs. $1,500 * 4 to fly the family out to Vietnam so you can all squeeze into a single $12 a night room at an inn which must have been really off the beaten path (how do you get the family to that inn, and where the heck in rural Vietnam was it?) It just doesn't compute. I love travel, and speak several languages, two of them fluently. But traveling as a single college student is very different from traveling as a family. Costs for a single person are 1/3 to 1/4 those of taking a family, plus I stayed in places as a student that you couldn't take kids to (like the red light districts in some areas - cheap, but not suitable for my family!) I'm not going to blame somebody for not being able to afford to take a whole family on vacation. |
Wait, so now it doesn't matter if we've TRAVELED abroad, we have to have LIVED abroad in order to be "cultured?" Give me a freaking break. You're quite the pretentious twat. |
The views I have heard in this area are humorous. I totally agree there are some who do the tour bus in a narcissistic fashion. For bragging rights, it seems. Funny! We have been VERY fortunate to see MANY places (NOT from a tour bus), but I would not condemn those who have not been. I admire those who take the initiative. It is more difficult for me to admire those who have either had mummy or daddy send them for a semester/year/whatever abroad; or those who have had a job (for example) do all the heavy work for them (i.e.: moving, relocation services, networking). Ideally a travel experience would entail independent, informed planning and cultural experiences, which may or may not include seeing all the sites. But I don't condemn someone for saying the best this or that they ever had was (fill in the blank). Not every experience is YOUR experience, thankfully. The irony is that those who feel "travelled" are usually the first to claim their experience somehow superior. Funny and so very typical. Nothing like acting well traveled. |
I have traveled abroad and quite a bit in the U.S. There are many more places that I would like to go to see abroad, but airports are starting to give me anxiety. I really want to do more traveling around the U.S. because we A) love to take road trips B) enjoy experiencing the different regions and people in our own country and C) it's much easier to do with a 3 year old....at least, our 3 year old! |