T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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539.1 | Not what, but why, counts | OLYMP::BENZ | Service(d) with a smile | Thu Dec 06 1990 05:21 | 10 |
| Jerry,
I would spend a small portion of those available hours to find out why
you really dread vacations. And what you want to do in the vacations
(i.e. chatting up, or doing something for yourself, or sport, or
culture). I also find it is easier to learn to have vacations by
oneself if one starts with small segments, like an extended weekend.
Heinrich
(who thinks he is slowly getting to grips with that problem)
|
539.2 | Have a good time, whatever you do... | YUPPY::DAVIESA | She is the Alpha... | Thu Dec 06 1990 08:16 | 13 |
|
jerry -
I tend to pick one of my special interests/projects, and base a holiday
around that. I read a lot about the stuff that interests me anyway,
and then I plan to visit places where some of the action took place,
or someone special lived, or whatever....
I'm currently planning a "Joan of Arc" holiday...:-)
'gail
|
539.3 | Two in a row... | YUPPY::DAVIESA | She is the Alpha... | Thu Dec 06 1990 08:19 | 16 |
|
RE. -1
Whilst typing in the title for that, I thought of something else....
Maybe it would be usful for you to take a long, honest look at what
you *really* enjoy doing - and then go where you're likely to find it!
I spent years telling myself that I really enjoyed climbing up
hills in the Lake District and camping out (due to SO pressure), when
in fact there are many other things/styles of holiday I prefer.
And then you could consider all those places you've wanted to get
around to visiting, groups you've meant to join, things you've
meant to do.....and go do them!
'gail
|
539.4 | Interest vacation | KAOA01::LAPLANTE | | Thu Dec 06 1990 09:12 | 16 |
|
You seem to be getting a consensus here. Start with deciding on
something you really like to do and plan the vacation around that.
I love baseball, my wife isn't crazy about it. But I took a vacation
that hit ball parks from Montreal to Cincinatti and all points
inbetween. Great time and I didn't need a crowd.
My uncle is a widower and loves golf. His ambition is to play all the
public courses in Florida (not in one year) so he plans his vacations
that way.
You shouldn't have too much trouble planning a vacation. In fact the
planning can be almost as enjoyable as the vacation itself.
Roger
|
539.5 | I haven't DONE this for years | DOOLIN::HNELSON | Evolution in action | Thu Dec 06 1990 09:51 | 8 |
| I like the idea of a driving vacation, with some highlight each day and
a different friend each evening. Hmmm, I can get to and spend two hours
at Amos's Amazing Cavern (!), then drive four more hours and find my
old college roommate in Winston-Salem. An evening is a good amount of
time to spend, esp. without wearing out a welcome, and the friend is
happy to provide bed or sleeping bag space.
FWIW - Hoyt
|
539.6 | wishing | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Thu Dec 06 1990 10:31 | 34 |
| You don't say quite what it was that you loved every minute of.
Being with family. Being in an imaginative place like an
amusement park. Being away from work/home/community. Did
your vacations take you TO something or AWAY from something?
You now dread the vacation. Wife and kids are not there; is
there something else that isn't there? For example, what about
doing one of the DisneyXXXs again on your own?
What would it be like to limit yourself to no more than
xx (say 30) miles of driving each day and sleeping at home
each night? Spending two weeks doing this? Would that drive
you crazy? Craziness can be a place where you find new things.
If you like to make lists, resist that urge for two solid
weeks. (I'm saying two weeks, because I've heard men who never
took more than one week's vacation at a time say that the first
time that they took two weeks, they discovered that on the 10th
or 11th day, something changed. It took them more than a week
to get out of the "work" mold.)
Read "Blue Highways" or "Travels with Charley" or other books on
traveling alone across the country.
(If I had two weeks right now, I would hole up in my place, get
my wood stove going, and start day-dreaming, reading, and journal
writing. This is the best time of the year to do it -- the darkest
time of the year. This is the time when we need to be indoors,
in a semi-hibernation state. I'd be sure to get some sunshine and
exercise every day, eat lightly but well, get out with people now
and then, but I'd get in eight hours a day in day-dreaming. Wish
I had 320 vacation hours to spend!)
Bill
|
539.7 | Look for lots of people and different things to do | WORDY::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Thu Dec 06 1990 11:13 | 31 |
|
Hi Jerry,
I really look forward to my semi-annual, September vacation in Provincetown,
alone. Some people think that I'm nuts going on vacation alone, but I
really enjoy it. I find that it's really easy to find people to go to
dinner with, to go to the movies with, to go out drinking with, and so
on. And, when I want to be alone (reading, sunbathing, shopping, and
so forth), that's no problem.
Obviously, I don't think that the destination has to be Provincetown
(Cape Cod, in Massachusetts), but I think that it would have to be
someplace where there are a lot of people available for talking
(someplace where there would be other single vacationers looking for
something to do), and lots of options for things to do (so you can
choose from lots of stuff depending on whether you want company or you
want to be alone).
I'd avoid places that seem to have only one outlet, like a small
amusement park or a cabin in the woods. I'd also avoid places that
seem dominated by families and kids. Pick something that is diverse.
(For example, Disney World has an amusement park, nice restaurants, a
night life in Orlando, swimming, and other things to do; however, it
does seem pretty "family" oriented.)
I also know you well enough to know that you're good at meeting
people, and you're a very charming conversationalist. If you go in
with the attitude, "It's going to be fun to see who I can meet next,"
then I think that you'll have a blast.
--Gerry
|
539.8 | Creating a random access life ... | SWAM3::ANDRIES_LA | and so it goes ... | Thu Dec 06 1990 11:25 | 15 |
| Hey, Bill, plan my next vacation. Your ideas sound great.
Jerry, how about getting in the can ans just plain exploring. Seems to
me adults sometimes lose their sense of adventure; if it's not on a pre-
planned itinerary then don't bother. Just get in the car, head north
from Beelerland and aim for the Pacific northwest. What will you
find? Who will you meet? Will it be fun? What's the point? Ah,
that's the adventure!
Read "Blue Highways", a real-life account about a man who gave up his pre-
planned life, got in a van and discovered himself as he discovered the
country. A beautiful book.
Allbest,
LArry
|
539.9 | hope I never have to take a vacation alone | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Thu Dec 06 1990 12:34 | 5 |
| I've never taken a vacation alone and haven't a clue how I'd do it.
I think I'd be fine as long as I was busy but idle time would get
to me.
Alfred
|
539.10 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | No artificial sweeteners | Thu Dec 06 1990 13:19 | 9 |
| If I had to take a vacation alone, I'd immediately find the ballsiest
place to go fishing and go there. I'd fish until I was tired of catching,
suck down mega brewskis, and fish some more. Then I'd go home and do some work
on the house. You know, all those projects you see when you're doing something
else and say "one of these days I'm gonna..."
I'd probably include some hiking or camping as well. Take the dog with ya.
The Doctah
|
539.11 | | USWS::HOLT | ATD Group, Palo Alto | Thu Dec 06 1990 13:30 | 10 |
|
grab a plane to Islamabad
unpack my bike
ride to Kashi
grab a plane home
write a book about it
|
539.12 | Know thyself. . . | NATASH::WALKER | | Thu Dec 06 1990 14:02 | 14 |
| What I really feel I want to do on a vacation is rest. Give me a cabin
with a porch and a view of the alps, and maybe a new Dick Francis book.
But this might bore you silly.
I'd also like to build a house, so attending one the the
build-it-yourself courses in Mass. or Maine would be lovely.
Knowing yourself is the thing -- and you might try to catch your
fantasies for that -- what do you see yourself doing in your mind?
BTW, are the children grown? Can you -- do you want to -- take them
along?
Briana
|
539.13 | | LAGUNA::BROWN_RO | Just Doo Dah It! | Thu Dec 06 1990 14:42 | 9 |
| Do you ski, General? Get thyself to Mammoth, sir, and partake of some
lovely countryside and the beauty of the Sierra Nevadas, either
downhill or cross-country style, and then on to Tahoe, and Reno to
lose yer wages....it's your neighborhood.
Yosemite is supposed to be gorgeous in winter, as well.
-roger
|
539.14 | | CSC32::S_HALL | Pumpen the Airen in the Parroten..... | Thu Dec 06 1990 14:52 | 24 |
|
Do you get magazines that focus on your interests ?
Some of the vacation things I'm aware of :
1) 1 and 2-week Folk music/crafts workshops in the mountains
of West Virginia (Augusta Heritage Workshops).
2) Horse-riding vacations for from 3-days to 2 weeks in
different areas of the US (from Far West to New
England), and Europe.
3) I'm a pilot, so often see flight schools advertising
new ratings, training, etc. in locales like Florida
and South Carolina, complete with oceanside condo for
the term of the training.
4) One of the Nature Conservancy ( or similar groups )
'theme' treks -- some even to places like Nepal,
South America.
The imagination's the limit.
Steve H
|
539.15 | Hum...Mr. Fisher got my brain jump started .... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Rush Limbaugh , Jr. | Fri Dec 07 1990 02:13 | 37 |
| .6> You don't say quite what it was that you loved every minute of.
.6> Being with family. Being in an imaginative place like an
.6> amusement park. Being away from work/home/community. Did
.6> your vacations take you TO something or AWAY from something?
Just the "togetherness" ... watching the kids have the blast of their
life ... that's what I loved ... I loved my family.
.12> BTW, are the children grown? Can you -- do you want to -- take them
.12> along?
No, they're not "grown" (Hell, *I'm* not grown up yet) ... I'd love more than
anything on the face of this earth to "repeat" one of the vacations of the
past, but, that's not really possible ... I guess that I've got to give it
up some time, and, that time is now. That's what hurts. It's over.
I don't really want to go to places where, as I said, it's very "family"
oriented. It would hurt, a great deal, to be reminded of what I HAD, so
thoroughly screwed up, and, will not have again....at the same time I love
kids more than anything in the world....I love to see a smile on their face,
to hear the laughter....to see them thoroughly excited. A dichotomy.
Damned if I do and damned if I don't.
.13> Do you ski, General? Get thyself to Mammoth, sir, and partake of some
.13> lovely countryside and the beauty of the Sierra Nevadas....
Well, sir, I've not lived an exemplary life, and, sliding down the side
of a mountain at 90 MPH with nothing but God between me and a tree ... well
I don't think that I've much of a chance ...
You know...Mr. Fisher has got a point ... I'm in sales, love to meet people,
love to talk ... this is a major part of my "personality" ... I've got to
see if I can't come up with something along those lines ....
Thanks...I've heard some good suggestions in this string...still looking.
Jerry
|
539.16 | A couple more... | CSS::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Fri Dec 07 1990 09:27 | 14 |
| Jerry,
Two suggestions: If you like a sense of adventure, I would point you to Barefoot
Windjammer Cruises. My wife and I have been on three and have
always had a great time. These "Tall Ships" are based in the
Caribbean, very informal (dressing for dinner means you put a
tee-shirt on over your bathing suit if you should be wearing
one), not that expensive, the people who usually take these
cruises are interesting (you may fall in love), etc.
Second suggestion, since you like kids, why not take a month
off next summer and work in a summer camp?
Hope these help...
|
539.17 | <Give it away...> | MRMARS::HETRICK | | Fri Dec 07 1990 09:34 | 15 |
| Have you ever thought about spending your vacation doing something
charitable? You could take a week or two and work at a fresh aire
camp for disadvantaged kids, there are all kinds of "outreach"
trips usually sponsored by religious organizations to help out people
in economically depressed areas, or you could even spend time lending
a hand in local shelters for the homeless.
It sounds like you miss the togetherness and feeling of being needed
with your family, and also like you feel some guilt or regret about
your past. It doesn't appeal to everyone, but maybe helping someone
else out could also make you feel better, too.
just a thought..
c.
|
539.18 | We have nothing to fear but fear itself? | MORO::BEELER_JE | Rush Limbaugh , Jr. | Fri Dec 07 1990 14:56 | 10 |
| .9> I've never taken a vacation alone and haven't a clue
.9> how I'd do it.
You know....I've been thinking about this...I think that this is *the*
root of the (my) problem...I've never done it alone and perhaps there's
just this fear of the "unnown" .... fear that it "can't be like it
was" ....
Hummmmm......
Jerry
|
539.19 | vacations with a purpose | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Fri Dec 07 1990 15:40 | 18 |
| RE: .18 Jerry have you tried to talk one of your daughters into
taking a trip with you while you're still young enough to keep
up with them? OR are they in one of those "don't want to be seen
with a parent stage?"
One thing that I thought of from an earlier note is some sort of
group trip with a purpose. I went on a couple of bicycle trips
when I was a kid that helped me have fun and meet a lot of people.
Even though my brother was on the same trips it wasn't really a
"family vacation". Those trips were about a month each (100 miles
a day) and that may not be your idea of a good time but there may
be other things. I have a friend who uses his vacation to work with
habitat for humanity. (They build houses for low income people.)
There are also archaeological trips though museums (Boston Museum of
Science is always advertising such.) Presumably there are other types
of "working" vacations that might work for you.
Alfred
|
539.20 | Enjoy the Journey! | GLDOA::PAGEL | Peekin' under the rocks ... | Sat Dec 08 1990 00:15 | 22 |
| Jerry,
Having been in a similar situation, after finding myself alone
after years of "group" vacations ... what I've found to work for
me, and be loads of fun, is to take a "visiting" vacation. I plan
to visit a friend on the west coast ... or the east coast ... or
wherever. Since I'm in Michigan, and really enjoy driving/exploring,
I take my time getting there .. stop at every single spot that
interests me; be it funky souviner shop or art gallery, or whatever;
and really just enjoy not having a deadline. Once I reach my
destination and stay for a day or two, it's back on the road ... and
more exploring/adventure. After many years of fine-tuning this mode of
travel, I find that I enjoy the travel more than the actual visit.
This way, I have a real destination, and a vacation plan, but my
real experience/enjoyment is gained while I'm alone. Besides
finding out that you really enjoy your own company, you just may
meet some truly delightful people along the way.
Enjoy the Journey!
C.
|
539.21 | Why not ... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Rush Limbaugh , Jr. | Mon Dec 10 1990 12:14 | 48 |
| Hummmmmmm......
I'm going to pack up the car, take all my camera gear and set my
"final" destination as that of Houston, Texas (to visit my mother).
That's my only schedule ... I may drive by way of Albuquerque, El Paso,
Kansas City, or Chicago! I really don't care ... If I average 500
miles a day or 50 miles a day ... I don't really care. I'm going to
stop and take pictures of anything I want to ... go anywhere I want to
- if I see a sign that says "Antique Auction - High School Gym" in a
little town of 1,000 people, and, the mood hits me ... I'll go ... If
it doesn't, I won't.
I'll stop and take pictures of anything ... anywhere ... and stay as
long as I want to stay ...
On week days, I'll go wherever I want to, and, visit whatever/whoever
I want to ... on Sunday's I'm going to find the smallest country
church so far back in the backroads of American that even God has
forgotten that it exist...I want to sing the hymns of the old Cokesbury
Hymnal ... if I can talk my way into it, I'll play the piano (or pump
organ) for 'em ...
When I pass through Arizona or West Texas ... I'll probably find some
place to get a horse ... sleeping bag and camping gear ... mount him and
ride off to some place where no man has set foot for a long time past
... just watch the moon rise ... look at the stars ... listen to the
sounds of the desert ... build a campfire ... hunt for my food ....
When I pass trough Dallas I'll probably go to some bar ... close to my
motel and drink myself silly - to forget that which was and finally
acknowledge that that which is. Naturally, I'll promise God that if
He'll let me live through the night, I'll never drink again, then,
promptly break that promise the next night ...
Finally, in Houston, I'll visit my mother for a few days ... we'll talk
about what was, what is, and what can be ... and ... well we'll see
what happens ... then to Galveston for a few days and I'll think about
the monster hurricanes that came through when I was growing up ... I'll
probably visit some of the people that I helped to rebuild their homes
after they were devastated by those monsters ... walk along the beach,
watch the time come in ... listen to the waves breaking on the seawall,
spend the night at the Galvez Hotel ... then head back to Beelersfield.
On the way back, the same thing as on the way there ... anything I want to
do...taking as long as I want....doing whatever suits me at the time...
Jerry
|
539.22 | Your very own Blue Highways | SWAM3::ANDRIES_LA | and so it goes ... | Mon Dec 10 1990 13:02 | 5 |
| Jerry, I looks like you've found the American Dream. Hope you have the
adventure of your life. Let's hear some stories when you return!
Allbest,
LArry
|
539.23 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Mon Dec 10 1990 23:56 | 5 |
| Stories?! hell, I want a book! That way I can at least get off
vicariously. I would like to do that myself...different destination
though! ;-) Have fun and enjoy it!!!
Capt. Scott
|
539.24 | Kids | YUPPY::DAVIESA | She is the Alpha... | Tue Dec 11 1990 06:58 | 10 |
|
Re: charity stuff
Jerry - if what you *really* enjoyed was watching your kids having a
once-in-a-lifetime good time maybe you'd enjoy taking some other
kids to do the same thing. There are many great kids who need "support"
when having fun, and lots of organisations who need volunteers to
help out with field trips to some fun places....
'gail
|
539.25 | Hooray for You! | GLDOA::PAGEL | Peekin' under the rocks ... | Tue Dec 11 1990 11:12 | 10 |
| Re: .21 - Jerry
Now THAT's my kind of vacation, and the kind I try to take every
chance I get. May this be the first of *many* such adventures!
Cindy
|
539.26 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Partner in the Almaden Train Wreck! | Mon Dec 17 1990 22:43 | 6 |
| Jerry, when in Albuquerque, stop in at Cervantes, corner of San Mateo
and Gibson (right next to Kirtland AFB). Order the chiles relleno.
Put it in a fed-ex package and mail it to me. order another one for
you. Have a good vacation!
DougO
|
539.27 | Explore. | FTMUDG::REINBOLD | | Thu Dec 20 1990 18:03 | 36 |
| Jerry,
I'm not a single guy, but I sometimes take vacations alone. This
August I drove over 4,000 miles. What I do is decide what general
area of the country I want to explore, then get books on that area
with lots of pictures, to pin down a few specific things I want to
see. I also get books on Bed & Breakfasts in the area.
(By the way, some of the most memorable times of my life are trips
I've taken with my kids, so I know what you're talking about there!)
In August I wandered around Wyoming (I've been there a few times
before, too). In Cody I stayed at the old Irma Hotel, Buffalo Bill
Cody's hotel that he named after his daughter. The restaurant has
a huge cherry backbar given to him by Queen Victoria. You can
wander around in the morning and look at the suites in the original
part of the hotel. I went to a rodeo and a real rodeo cowboy tried to
pick me up. I spent 2 nights camping in Yellowstone Nat'l Park and
met a man I still keep in touch with. I eventually went along part of
the Oregon Trail, across Oregon to the coast, spent a night camping
almost on the beach in a campground with showers. Went to the Olympic
peninsula, to the Hoh Rain Forest, across part of Puget Sound by ferry,
across the North Cascades Highway to a picturesque old town where I
stayed in Washington, and eventually made my way back to Colorado.
I made it a point to NOT eat at fast-food restaurants, and I found a
couple places I'd definitely wish were closer to home. Of course I
took lots of photos. I make it a point to have no set schedule,
stopping when something catches my fancy, like antique shops or old
mining towns or museums or cheese factories. Works for me! I just love
to explore!
Sometime I'd like to get gutsy enough to go on a cruise or go explore
the Mediterranean.
Paula
|
539.28 | Earthwatch | FTMUDG::REINBOLD | | Thu Dec 20 1990 18:16 | 12 |
| Another thing that sounds intriguing is "Earthwatch". They have
all sorts of projects all over the world -- some I remember are
observing dolphins and whales in various locations, something in the
Canary islands, archeological digs in the Mediterranean, observing
dietary effects on musk ox in Alaska, helping baby turtles to the sea
in Mexico, counting birds in Hawaii. They take volunteers for about
$2,000 for a week or two (you pay them), and you usually have some time
off for yourself each day. The magazines they have describe the
working conditions and any requirements (like having to be fit enough
to walk up a steep hill all day).
Haven't tried it yet, but it sounds interesting.
|
539.29 | Such a deal | EXPRES::GILMAN | | Fri Dec 21 1990 08:19 | 3 |
| Re. Earthwatch. WHAT A DEAL FOR THEM.... you pay them to do work for
them... such a DEAL! I know, its for the good of the Planet... if
it wern't for that aspect................
|
539.31 | How I spent my summer vacation.... | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Whittlers chip away at life | Wed Dec 26 1990 12:17 | 60 |
|
Last few;;;;;
I seem to detect a note of "If it ain't all for me, it ain't worth
it...." Maybe I am reading it wrong, but that is what I seem to see....
Let me tell you about the vacation I took with my daughter (age 15 minus
a couple of weeks) last summer. She is active in her church youth group
and they decided to do a work project in Appalachia. An advisor to the
group has worked with an organization for the past 6 years and got everyone
involved in it. ASP, Appalachian Service Project is a church affiliated
group that has worked for the past 21 years to provide and rebuild adequate
shelter for families in the 12 poorest counties in the Appalachains. The
areas they work are in West VA, VA, KY, and Tenn., and they have a central
work site in each of the 12 counties there. For 8 weeks each summer they
have groups come for a week at a time to stay at the center and go out
each day to an assigned house to work on it. A project may take one week or
it may take all 8 weeks to finish.
My daughter requested that I join the group going down because I am fairly
handy and she and I enjoy each others company. I spent a week putting
the finishing touches on a house that had been heavily rebuilt in the past
5 weeks. My team consisted of one other adult ( a woman manager here at
DEC) and three kids, ages 14-15. My daughter was on a team of 2 adults and
2 kids that did 90% of the work needed on another house. We saw each other
only for breakfast and dinnertime, and had a wonderful experiance. My host
family had a 2 room house, with no indoor plumbing, but needing a new roof,
framing on several walls, and new siding to keep it dry and warm. My
daughters team rebuilt a wall and partial foundation on the back of a house
that was owned by a 65 year old woman whose father had built the house many
years ago. The work done on that house enabled the elderly lady to continue
to live in the house without fear of falling thru a floor or having the
house collapse in the kitchen area.
In both cases, neither my family nor my daughter's elderly friend could
have afforded to have the work done without the efforts and contribution of
ASP. some 6500 volunteers worked this summer and repaired over 300 homes of
people in similar circumstances.
Was it a vacation? Not in your typical sense....I worked my tail off, so
did my daughter and everyone else. But we got to make new friends, both on
other work teams as well as in the valleys and hollows where we worked. We
got to see some beautiful scenery in western VA, as well as some crippling
poverty and immense problems. We had 4 days on the road, not a lot of fun
driving, but not bad, either. It took us both about 4-5 days to recover
from the work but I think that is a small price to pay for helping out
someone.
Others might disagree with me on my motives and why I would consider this a
vacation as opposed to just a change of work scenery. I found it very
rewarding and I was particularly pleased that my daughter and others got to
see a part of the country that is forgotten and out of sight, but in
desparate need of help. She is a lot better educated now about how good a
life she has and how little some folks get by on. That is worth all the
work in itself.
Vic
PS: She will be returning this year to work again, I may be needed as well,
not sure yet.
|
539.32 | Enjoy Yourself, its your l | PEKING::SNOOKL | | Fri Oct 23 1992 09:46 | 5 |
|
Something really relaxing is a boating holiday. I went on an old canal
boat up and down the Grand Union Canal round Northants and Birmingham.
Fair enough, bits were hard work like opening all the locks and having
to do self-catering, but its a really enjoyable way to spend a holiday.
|