Posts Tagged ‘travel’

Never Again

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

We took a red suitcase with us to Puerto Rico. It was oversized, near to the point of comically so, and it held everything the three of us would need for the week. So that Wednesday afternoon, when it never appeared on the lethargic conveyor belt of baggage carousel 4 in Luiz Munoz International Airport in San Juan Puerto Rico, to say we were upset, well, that would be an understatement. It also should have been a sign.

The bag did show up later that afternoon, and was set to be delivered to us that night. Only it was delivered to the wrong building, and so the following morning, Mike could be seen dragging a very large red suitcase around the hot and windy main road of our very large resort complex. The resort shuttle, much like the bag the day before, never showed up.

While Mike was schlepping and sweating with our belongings, I was inside our villa taking long, close, concerned looks at Drew’s face. He had awoken that morning with a rash on his face. At first I thought maybe there had been mosquitos in his room, or perhaps a couple bugs had decided to nestle in with him in his crib—the rash was more pronounced on one side of his face. And there were other spots too—his knees were developing a slight rash, and wait, a diaper change revealed a lacy rash invading his backside. Come to think of it, the previous day he had seemed to have a fever while we were on the plane. His body had been hot right down to the soles of his feet.

Later that day the three of us piled into a taxi and drove 40 minutes to a local doctor. I held Drew on my lap and he fell asleep nestled into my lap. I looked down at his face, red from a continued fever and a rash that seemed to be spreading by the minute, and cried. What was going on with him? Who was this doctor? Where was my mud slide?

We ended up at a clinic that was part of a medical office building situated along a busy highway. Our taxi driver (who, it should be noted, went ABOVE and BEYOND for the duration of that day) waited inside the clinic for us while Mike and I paced the tiled atrium outside with Drew. The wait may have only been 30 minutes, but with a baby who was alternately crying in our arms and curiously stomping up and down the place, running head-first for the stairs, it was interminable.

The doctor told us he had never seen a rash like the one Drew presented with. Need I say these are not the words you want to hear from a doctor? He ordered us to a lab within the building for bloodwork. If we thought Drew’s crying was bad before, it was a joyous laugh compared to what came out of him when I was charged with pinning him down while a lab technician pricked his finger and methodically squeezed 20 purple drops of his blood into a small vial. We three emerged from the lab shaking, and returned to waiting and pacing.

The bloodwork came back normal. After a check of Drew’s ears and throat, the doctor declared a case of strep and prescribed a course of antibiotics, Benadryl and pain relievers. The rest of the day was spent consoling a very cranky toddler and trying to hide our looks of horror at the blisters that were steadily forming across his face, hands, feet and knees. I had heard of strep, and even scarlet fever, but this? This didn’t add up.

Thanks to the wonders of Dr. Google and BabyCenter ( I KNOW.), we re-diagnosed our son with a case of Coxsackie virus, also known as hand-foot-mouth disease (but NOT hoof-mouth disease, LET’S BE CLEAR). It’s a nasty, vile illness, and we soon learned to what degree. Out of six people on our little vacation from hell (four adults, two babies), five people got coxsackied. And so, as each day dawned a brilliant sunrise over the Caribbean, another member of our fated group came down with a fever, then sore throat, then blisters.

On our last day, Mother’s Day, Mike came down to the pool where I was resting–for the first time in the entirety of our trip–and said, “If you think Drew’s face is bad, you should see Charlie’s.” Oh no, I thought, were both babies now blister-faced? As it turned out, no. Charlie, 8-month daredevil that he is, had taken a headfirst dive out of his stroller and onto a concrete floor. He now had Coxsackie AND a nasty road rash.

That afternoon, us four adults did the only thing we could think of. We poured a bottle of rum into a pitcher of Bahama Mama mix and had at it. This may have been the vacation we would never forget, but we sure as hell were going to try.

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Dreams Become Reality, Sort Of

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Back in our brooding days of youth, my friend Kate and I used to lay around in our sweats, eating knock-off Tostitos, drinking Beringer White Zin and dream aloud about what our future lives would look like. We’d try to picture our husbands, foretell how many kids we’d have and what they’d look like. As we delved deeper and deeper into these imagined futures, we’d talk with growing excitement about how great it would be to get our families together each summer and vacation at the beach. ‘Can you just picture it,’ we’d say, ‘our little kids running around on the beach?’ In these imagined scenarios, the two of us would be lazily reclining on beach chairs while our kids calmly and quietly played in the sand, our handsome husbands by our sides. (How adorably naïve we were, to think we’d be able to sit on the beach and gossip over books and magazines, while our kids magically minded themselves.)

It was all a little surreal when that long ago dream came somewhat true over this past Labor Day weekend. Nearly a decade out from the Era of Nachos and Bad Wine, Kate and I found ourselves taking up residence at a beautiful house on the Jersey Shore, along with our respective husbands and sons. In some ways, our vision had come true, and of course in many ways it was far different than our younger selves would have ever believed.

When we first dreamed up our futures, we didn’t even know our now-husbands existed. We pictured adorable children, but we couldn’t have imagined just how adorable they would turn out to be, or how our hearts would have the capacity to love them as fiercely as we do. With no real-world experience to go on, we didn’t realize that our sons, at such tender ages, would be far more interested in muddy sand than in playing with each other. That we wouldn’t have the time to sit on beach chairs, catching up for hours. How were we to know that instead we’d be running around the sand with our kids, stopping for brief intervals to marvel or complain over what each was doing, giving each other a silent look that could only mean, ‘You know there’s nothing I’d love more right now than to sit and talk with you, except, that is, to sit at the edge of the tide, getting sand in my ass because my baby loves the sand and it’s his first experience with it and I don’t want to miss it for the world, sandy crotch or no!’

No, back in the daydream era we didn’t realize that we might not get to sit on the beach at the same time because our kids would be on different nap schedules and you Do Not Mess With The Nap. We wouldn’t have believed that we’d go to bed at 10PM (on vacation!) because we were just So. Damn. Shot. from the day.

I still like to think that one day our dream will come true. Our kids will be old enough to play by themselves. Our beach chairs will actually get some use. We’ll park our asses in them and talk and talk. Occasionally we’ll get up to yell at someone to come closer, or to stop flinging sand. And maybe, for old time’s sake, we’ll toast with a glass of White Zin.

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bffs and our boys

First Family Vacation: Check!

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Thank the sweet baby Jebus, all of my travel fears were for naught. Drew couldn’t have been a more perfect traveler. Well, he probably could have, but he behaved exactly the way we dreamed about. Minimal fuss on the plane, save for takeoff and landing, and really, who could blame him? His poor little ears must have hurt. Thankfully it was nothing a little feeding couldn’t cure.

**Side note: forgive me for going off on a slightly bitter tangent, but can I take a moment to tell you about the awful return to New York landing we endured? There’s me, saddled with a cold, feeling as though my face is going to explode while we descend altitude, there’s the pilot who must have been compensating for *something* judging by the way he came barreling into landing full speed ahead, causing the plane to bounce as though we were caught in a turbulence cloud of doom, and there’s the baby, who could only be calmed down by nursing, which involved me desperately trying to hang onto him while the plane raises and dips, raises and dips, all the while my face contorting into uglier and uglier paroxysms of pain from the pressure. Oh the pressure!

But! Back to the matter at hand. The vacation! It was glorious. It was everything we love about a warm, sunny destination, just with the addition of swim diapers and even more sunscreen. It was board shorts and shades, frozen drinks, overpriced poolside food, damp lounge chairs, an abundance of striped towels, no concept of time, daytime flip flops and evening dresses, late night dinners, white sheets, white towels, white bathrobes, front desk name mispronunciation, sandy feet, sunscreen and a little baby in resort wear.

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It was perfect, for all three of us.

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Vacation

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

The reservations have been confirmed. The checklist is written. The clothes are all laid out. The sunscreen is bought. The swimsuits have been begrudgingly tried on. We are ready for vacation. As ready as we’ll ever be, given that we’re traveling with a four month old. I’ve never been a nervous traveler, but it’s safe to say that this time around, I’m, well, I’m a little apprehensive.

I’ve been playing a silent movie in my mind, one in which I foresee all that could go wrong while traveling with an infant. We come stumbling through the terminal, lugging sixteen bags because one baby necessitates a very disproportionate amount of take-along items. The baby screams all the way through the security line, a hotbed for human nastiness own its own, now amplified with dagger-eyed stares directed at us and our screaming child. The baby somehow sets off the security alarm, resulting in a full-body pat down of chubby baby limbs that renders him wailing and inconsolable while I spew nastiness at the offending TSA officer. We take twenty five minutes to board, despite the pre-boarding privilege because we are tripping over our own carry-on items in a desperate search for the wipes—WHERE DID YOU PACK THE WIPES?!—because baby just pooped like he’s never pooped before just as we’re boarding the aircraft. And on and on, ad infinitum, right until we settle into our hotel room.

Of course, I’ve also silently pictured all that could go wrong post-flight during the course of our vacation, but I trust that your imaginations are capable of being as dire as mine, so we’ll leave it at that.

I’m sure that things will go far better than I’ve let myself imagine. They will, right? Tell me they will. I’ve been telling people that I kind of just want to get this vacation behind us so that we know what it’s like to travel with an infant and will be more confident travelers in the future with solid experience behind us. I’m not usually this way. I’m more of an ‘everything will be fine, don’t worry!’ kind of person. But. But. I just LOVE to travel. I want our child to love to travel. I want the addition of a child in our life to mark a seamless transition from being a traveling couple to a traveling family. So I guess I see this trip as setting the tone for our future, which I know is ridiculous because Drew will not always be four months old and in need of a warm boob to calm him down (which, BTW, nursing in public, I’m terrified of you too!).

I want—need?—this trip to go well so that we can continue to be inspired to see new places, not just the two of us, but all three of us. And if it doesn’t go well? I’ll just have to order enough poolside pina coladas to make the memories a little fuzzy.

Burnt Sienna

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

It’s the crayon that always sat in the back of your Crayola box, never needing to have its wrapper peeled back, never needing a sharpen. When you first pulled it out, aged four or five, you could barely read it, let alone pronounce it. Even at such a tender, open-minded age, you instantly deemed the color undesirable. It’s sort of drab. It’s not all that flattering. It doesn’t make a house look more like a home. It doesn’t make your trees look shadier, your sky bluer. It just sits there. It’s burnt sienna.

But then. Twenty-four years later you arrive in Austin, Texas on a weekend in the fall and you’ve never seen so much burnt sienna in your life. It’s still horribly unflattering. And yet. It’s the most vibrant color you’ve ever seen. It’s the heartbeat of a city. You can’t see it, but you’re sure that it courses through every person’s veins, seeps from their pores. It colors the dirt, settles over the walls of every building, swirls in the air, dusts its warm essence on everyone and everything as far as the eye can see.

Here, my weekend in Austin, Texas as the University of Texas Longhorns took on the Texas Tech Red Raiders–in all its Burnt Sienna glory.
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