- My husband and I took my sister’s kids to Paris, and things didn’t go as planned.Â
- I learned that things will happen and you just need to embrace chaos and change.Â
- Talking about the things each of us liked and didn’t like at the end of the day helped us plan better.Â
I’m a pretty goal-oriented traveler. I fill my days with as much sightseeing as I can handle. Forget the hotel pool. I’m checking off national landmarks and natural wonders from a carefully researched list.
This approach serves me well as a travel writer. Over the past 15 years, I’ve gone swimming with manatees, climbed a Roman aqueduct, and ziplined over canyons. But one thing I’ve never done? Travel with kids.Â
This year, my husband and I decided to take the kids on our trip to Paris. Not our kids, mind — my sister’s. Things didn’t go as planned, but I learned a lot along the way. Here’s what I wish someone had told me before we did it.
The itinerary will change, so embrace the chaos
Before our flight, I had a four-page Google Doc detailing every stop down to the hour. There were directions, ideas for where to eat, notes about opening times, and prices. It was a thing of beauty. We did about half of it.Â
There was a lot of change, not always because of the kids. Versailles was closed due to a strike, so we wandered the 300 years older though arguably less cool Château de Vincennes. And when the kids were exhausted with our 12,000 steps and six to eight monuments a day routine, I scaled things back and built-in midday breaks. It turns out, the slower place let us savor Paris as we never had before. Flexibility can be freeing.
Everyone needs their space
Booking hotels is usually easy for us. One king, please. Not so with two teens needing separate rooms. I scoured the internet for budget-friendly solutions until I discovered apart-hotels.Â
It’s just what it sounds like half apartment, half hotel. We had a front desk, continental breakfast, and other hotel amenities, plus a full kitchen and on-site washer and dryer for that last-minute laundry run. But most importantly, there was plenty of room for some much-needed alone time at the end of a long day.
Guided tours provide a welcome structure
I generally prefer exploring on my own, but our tour of the Eiffel Tower was one of the best things we did. The guide knew all about the tower, entertained us in line, and kept everyone moving along so my husband and I could take a back seat and just follow the group. Elsewhere, I was the de facto guide, the presumed expert on everything from 19th-century carnivals to cheese production in medieval France.
I cherish the photos we took of each other
While I typically fill my phone with landscapes of architecture and nature, my 13-year-old niece was all about selfies. We spent over an hour in the courtyard of the Petit Palais, snapping pics of each other by the cherry blossoms. We stopped for action shots of cartwheels under Jeff Koons’ 41-foot Bouquet of Tulips — they did the cartwheels; we did the photos. My niece even showed us how to take shadow selfies. And thanks to her encouragement, we have some of the best souvenirs from our trip.
The group posing for a shadow selfie.
Courtesy of the author
We shared our highs, lows, and buffaloes
This tip came from my sister partway through our trip, and it made a big difference in how we understood each other’s differing experiences. Here’s how it works. You ask everyone to share their high, low, and something random — a buffalo — from the day.
It gives you a framework to talk about the ups and downs, recognizing that vacation isn’t all rainbows. It also helped us learn what everyone liked and didn’t like so we could make the next day better.
Life is short; eat more pastries
As cool as it was to see paintings by Rembrandt and ancient Gallo-Roman ruins, we found out that wasn’t what the kids loved most. They liked pain au chocolat, truffles, and beignets. If I could go back in time, instead of visiting 10 museums and four pâtisseries, I’d do it the other way around.
Because it was when we were just hanging out — splitting a pastry or riding the metro — that we really got to know them. That’s when I discovered my niece likes K-pop, and my nephew knows how to cook chicken in the dishwasher, thanks to YouTube.
It was those unscripted moments, things definitely not on the itinerary, that I remember fondest. So if I had it to do all over again, I’d plan differently, plan less, and just enjoy being with these pretty cool people that I happen to love.