Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people always say "your kids won't remember it". Who cares if they remember it. If they have fun, it is worth it. Do you not throw your kids a birthday party when they are 6 years old "because they won't remember it". Do you not take your kids trick or treating because they wont remember it?
It's like people take their kids to Disney World for the parent points. It's weird.
Nice try, but Disney is expensive. Trick or treating isn’t. Some of us don’t have the money to take our children to Disney multiple times throughout their childhood, so we act “strategically” because we want them to have memories of it. If I only have the ability to take my child to a place once, I don’t want it to be at a point in her life where she can’t remember going. If that’s “parent points”, so be it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people always say "your kids won't remember it". Who cares if they remember it. If they have fun, it is worth it. Do you not throw your kids a birthday party when they are 6 years old "because they won't remember it". Do you not take your kids trick or treating because they wont remember it?
It's like people take their kids to Disney World for the parent points. It's weird.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get the memory thing either. My child went to a full day preschool for three years (2-5). She says she has no memories of going. She doesn't remember her teachers or any of the activities. That's ok. Still glad that she had fun there. (I realize this isn't a perfect analogy).
Anonymous wrote:I took my daughter when she was 10 and it was perfect. Old enough for everything, could walk all day long, easy to get along with, enough energy for everything.
Anonymous wrote:Why do people always say "your kids won't remember it". Who cares if they remember it. If they have fun, it is worth it. Do you not throw your kids a birthday party when they are 6 years old "because they won't remember it". Do you not take your kids trick or treating because they wont remember it?
Anonymous wrote:We are DVC members and go every other year. I'm very glad our first trip was when my oldest (a girl) was 5. At 5, she thought everything was real and it was so magical and walked around Magic Kingdom in costume. By 7, she had a blast on the rides but she knew the princesses were staff members in costumes and it was just a very different type of trip. She absolutely remembers the trip from when she was at five.
I don't think you can go wrong with a Disney trip because there's a lot to appeal to all age groups. She is ten now and loves Disney more than ever, but we do more rides like Rock'n Roller Coaster and Expedition Everest now rather than the carousel and Cinderella breakfast.