JungleBumCT
New Member
Howdy! So I'm in a bit of a contemplative mode, as usual.
My contemplative mode usually comes after each trip, and, having returned from a WDW trip last week, I'm in it right now. I'm not so fond of my version of contemplative mode, though, since it's usually a sad combo of missing the trip and regret over not experiencing it to the fullest.
The latter is a hard-to-describe feeling that I didn’t take everything in like I could have. Like it all passed so quick, and now I’m back in cold, blah Utah. No matter how much I plan and no matter how much fun I have, a few days after I get home I always feel like my trip somehow escaped me. Anybody else feel that way?
I live way out west and I have an above average-size gaggle of small children. I’m also not independently wealthy, so trips to WDW are rare and special. While the rarity does serve to keep Disney fresh for us, it also intensifies the hangover.
But that’s not necessarily the reason I’m responding. While actual trips to WDW parks are uncommon for us, trips to WDW are not. My wife’s airline job means we do get down to Orlando from time to time for free on standby. Keeping with what I mentioned above about absence making the heart grow fonder (or fresher), we usually take a couple days to explore the resorts, hike around the Fort Wilderness area, loop from the TTC to EPCOT and back on the monorail, and ride the boats between docks.
So we’ve got MK in view a lot of the time. We’ll take the ferry from the TTC and the monorail back—getting so close to the gates but never going in. It’s a tease, I guess, and it’s somewhat torturous. Looping around Spaceship Earth, we peer jealously at the ticketed visitors walking below, pining for the day—maybe soon if we can save our pennies—we’ll be able to return with a key (or wristband) to the kingdom.
Prior to last week, the last time we had actually entered any parks was ~2007. With several of these so-close-we-can-taste-it trips in between. Yeah, it was fresh.
I’m not suggesting this as a practical solution for you, but it’s personally how, out of budget necessity, we keep things fresh. Generally, though, I think absence/rarity/abstinence from the all-out park trip makes the full experience that much sweeter.