How Traveling With Kids Changes Parents and Kids

The reason I had children is to experience all there is to living; and never before have I experienced such a blissful adventure. Traveling with Kai and Nikko is my new adventure.
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I have heard stories about children growing up to be different than their parents. This is why soon after giving birth, I wondered how many ways my kids would be dramatically different than me. But I never, not in one-million, three hundred thousand and seven years, could have imagined that I would squeeze out a homebody, who 24 hours into a trip, cries to return to "Kai's house."

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Me after finding out I was pregnant.

Now for most people this would not be anything to lose sleep over, but I am a travel addict. A bratty girl who whines, Noooo, I do not want to go to Mexico again (imagine Veruca Salt's face when she wants an Oompa Loompa) and then forces her husband and children to join her in garnering a new passport stamp at least twice a year.

To make matters worse (or better, for me), I also happen to be a travel writer, who gets paid to explore Bigfoot's stomping grounds in Northern California, the backroads of Maui, the best campsites in Kenya and the best kid-friendly activities in Japan. In essence I have set myself up in a career that fuels my addiction. Making me a real happy camper.

Unfortunately, there are time when my kids can't be bothered. Midway into an airplane ride, Nikko is asking to get outside. When sleeping in a tent cabin in Yosemite, Kai tosses and turns like an achy-spine-having old coot. When presented with miles of Honolulu's finest strands, Nikko clings to my leg, uninspired by sandcastle building, waves or swimming.

And it's not for lack of practice. Kai has spent many a night in hotels -- from Napa Valley's celebrity hideout Auberge du Soleil to a paper-thinned walled party pad in Cairns, Australia -- still, the little dude would rather be at home. The jury is still out on young Nikko's affection for travel.

I am sure child psychologists would have a heyday with all this, citing stability and routine. But I prefer to cite the Wheelers (creators of the Lonely Planet travel series) who, in a San Francisco Chronicle article, claimed that though your toddler cannot remember his travels, lugging him into the jungles of Sri Lanka is sure to create a more flexible, patient young person. I would take this even further and say that it actually creates a more patient and flexible mom and dad.

And in this bendiness, I have had to alter the way I travel. I have been known to arrive in Tulum, Mexico at dusk on New Years Eve and walk the beach for hours searching for a place to sleep; and maybe it wasn't the best idea to crash out in a shady character's shed with another couple, sharing a very tattered hammock with my husband. But we survived. In the same vein, I have accepted the offer of Venezuelan villagers to stay in their house, share their arepas and dance late into the evening.

But both of these examples are moments I probably won't encounter with my sons while they are young, and I am ok with that.

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In preparing for a trip to Thailand, I actually (gulp) made reservations. At hotels. Nice ones. With pools. And room service. Between patting myself on the back for my savvy travel research (fancy one bedroom beachfront suites for under a hundred bucks! Thank you Agoda!), I have actually mourned the way I typically travel, wondering: how can I have adventure and spontaneity this way? But my very patient husband will quickly remind me that with a kid who wants to lug his pillow to every place he sleeps and a toddler, we have to accommodate them on our adventures.

I often wonder if this is adios to Brazilian Carnivale, impromptu invitations to imbibe yak butter tea with a family in Lhasa, dune buggy trips on walls of sand, hitching a ride with a Kenyan safari group to camp in the bush, hopping in the back of a Bedouin's flatbed truck to cross the Sahara, dancing on bars in Mykonos, motorbike trips in Vietnam, fire festivals in southern China, hitchhiking through Japan and all night dance parties.

Whenever I am feeling particularly morose, gazing all too long at my navel, I check myself. The reason I had children is to experience all there is to living; and never before have I experienced such a blissful adventure. One that surely trumps scuba diving in Moorea, being blessed at Lhasa's Potala Palace, experiencing eco-village living in India, showering while howler monkeys swung overhead in Costa Rica, swimming with dolphins in Praia di Pipa, Brazil, landing on a glacier in Alaska, or singing Beatles songs with kids from across the globe on the steps of the Duomo in Florence.

Traveling with Kai and Nikko is my new adventure. Call it an adventure in vacationing. In Hawaii we have family surf lessons, in Japan, we took a cooking class -- both adventures that we planned and prepped our kids for. And in the end they loved it. And so did I.

I just hope that all these journeys can infuse my children with my love of exploring, so they know that travel is more than going to a place and living it up. It is experiencing the destination, the people, the food, language and culture. And returning home with altered eyes, not just a bag full of new toys.

For more on our adventures, visit Planet Playground.

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