Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is funny how people make a big deal about going on vacation and do a ton of unnecessary planning. We go, we do, we have fun. None of it, is a big production or a big deal.
+1. It also comes from spending “too much” money on the vacation. It requires you to put more pressure on extracting “value” (fun? Memories?) from the vacation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got food poisoning once on day 1 and spent the entire expensive vacation in an expensive hotel room bathroom floor while my DH did a few of the expensive excursions by himself and we let the other ones go to waste. It was awful, and frankly 8 years later it still is to remember. I always plan for bad weather wherever we go and my expectations there are always low, but you can’t plan for debilitating illness.
Food poisoning is not a debilitating illness. Try an auto-immune disease on for size. Or maybe threw in a few brain tumors.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Expectations are always greater than reality. Lower your expectations; also sounds like you need to do some work with a therapist. I predict you are a firstborn high-functioning perfectionist with latent ADHD.
Anonymous wrote:We didn't get to go on our honeymoon because the island got hit by a hurricane two days before the wedding. We went on a smaller US vacation.
We had never been on trip together and just graduated from dental school. Dirt poor.
You make the best of it. You can find the joy in just being together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got food poisoning once on day 1 and spent the entire expensive vacation in an expensive hotel room bathroom floor while my DH did a few of the expensive excursions by himself and we let the other ones go to waste. It was awful, and frankly 8 years later it still is to remember. I always plan for bad weather wherever we go and my expectations there are always low, but you can’t plan for debilitating illness.
Food poisoning is not a debilitating illness. Try an auto-immune disease on for size. Or maybe threw in a few brain tumors.![]()
Anonymous wrote:We’ve cut way back on travel for this reason.
DH and I both work and when we take time off work, it just means working harder in the week leading up to the trip and then the week after.
Then it costs all this money that we don’t really have.
It just makes the stakes too high. I find it easier to just take days off and chill at home or see friends rather than traveling.
If we had more money or less stressful jobs maybe it would be different
Anonymous wrote:Expectations are always greater than reality. Lower your expectations; also sounds like you need to do some work with a therapist. I predict you are a firstborn high-functioning perfectionist with latent ADHD.
RUDE! What did I do to you?!
OP, I have this experience sometimes and I think it's a function of not having enough to look forward to in my daily life, plus anxiety. I used to be in academia so I was used to a lot more work travel plus flexible time off; now that I have more typical PTO, vacation time and travel feel so scarce and precious, there's almost too much anticipation.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is funny how people make a big deal about going on vacation and do a ton of unnecessary planning. We go, we do, we have fun. None of it, is a big production or a big deal.