Showing posts with label Vacation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vacation. Show all posts

November 25, 2009

Romancing Alone


"The engines roared. The boat broke the grip the tide and the dock had conspired to keep them bound to land, to their mundane life. They headed across the river that danced with the last glimmering rays of light the sun could manage to shoot over the horizon. They could see the silhouette of the bridge and the old city coming into view. Sitting at the back of the boat, he placed his arm around her shoulder and gently stroked the curls in her long brown hair. It had been awhile since he had felt this close and this at peace with her. Slowly she turned to him. He turned his head slightly to meet the gaze of her big blue eyes. He noticed that they hadn't changed in over twenty years of loving her. She carefully moved her lips near his ears and yelled, "DAMN! THE ENGINES SURE ARE LOUD RIGHT HERE! WE SHOULD HAVE SAT SOMEWHERE ELSE!"

Had my wife read this paragraph in one her romance novels I'm quite sure she would have found it somewhat romantic, save the last line of course. Living it however, she failed to appreciate any romantic qualities the situation seem to present at all.

This past weekend I took The Wife downtown for some much needed "us" time. I booked us a room at a nice hotel overlooking the river. I tried to be as romantic as I know how but seemed to miss the mark more times than not. We had a great time, a fabulous time to tell the truth. God knows we needed it. Still, the weekend left me wondering if the romance so many women seem to be seeking isn't right under their noses more times than they recognize? Or is it some unobtainable action that can only reach it's true potential in the bleached white pages of a romance novel? And if that is the case, do we men really stand a chance of turning fiction into reality? I wonder...


January 07, 2009

Me, The Crew and Natalya Too



Being the people watcher I am, the cruise was an excellent place to observe all types of people interacting with each other in unusual and sometimes unfamiliar settings. Most was what you would expect, people having fun, drinking, partying and trying to live the high life. One thing I couldn't get past, that most of my fellow passengers didn't seem to notice was the crew. The ship we were on had crew members from over 60 different countries. These are hard working people who are committed to their job. Rarely, do you not get more than you expect and most of the time with a big smile.

Each crew member had a name tag that stated their name, their job title and the country they were from. It didn't take long for me to get into the habit of looking at their tag. Our head waiter, Natalya, one of the a few female head waiters on the ship, was from Ukraine. She was fantastic at her job. She seemed to enjoy waiting on us and took an immediate liking to my children. Still, there seemed to be a sadness in her eyes, even when her face was covered by her smile.

For some reason I spent a lot of time on the cruise thinking, and yes worrying about the crew, including Natalya. They made such an effort to make us feel like we were the first people that ever went on a cruise, instead of just another group they had to serve this particular week. As I paid more attention, when the crew thought they were out of sight, I noticed their faces relaxed and it was obvious these were not the eternally happy people they wanted to project. How could they be really? Spending months away from home and family, serving people who only cared where and when they would get their next meal or drink or something. What a life. Of course working the ship had to be a better opportunity than the place they had left which made me appreciate their situation that much more.

The more I thought about them and watched them the more I wanted to talk to them. When I was able to, I made a point to talk them about them, their situation and their lives. Amazingly the fake smiles faded away and real people emerged, with real smiles. Simple five minute conversations about them changed the way they treated us. Yes, they were being paid to look after us but they were people too and they had value beyond bringing me my things and make my life cushy.

On the second night at sea all the servers had to dance around the tables they waited on. It was scripted but cute. Natalya asked my five year old to join her. Amazingly he did and he was captivated by her for the rest of the cruise. She seemed to enjoy his affection too but I had to wonder, was it an act? Either way she had made my little boy happy so I was grateful but I was left wondering. When I got the chance I talked to her. She had spent the last 10 years of her life working on cruise ships. Seven or eight month stretches with only four or five weeks at home. She also told me the next week was her last. She was ready to go home for good.





The next morning, much to my surprise I saw Natalya in the lower dinning room busing tables. It shocked me because I assumed that a head waiter would be above "that kind of work". Seeing her at work that early also made me wonder just how many hours she was putting in each day. A few minutes later she showed up at my table with my son in tow. Seems he had seen her and wondered off to talk to her. We were all laughing and talking then she looked down at my empty plates and reached to get them. Stupidly I told her, "you don't have to do that." She gave me an odd look. I was embarrassed because I realized she did have to do it, it was her job.

On the last stop of the cruise, Nassau, as we passed through customs going into the country, we heard a person yelling out my sons name. She was making a lot of effort to catch up with us through a crowd of people. It was Natalya. She looked different with her hair down wearing her blue jeans. Maybe I read too much into the gesture but this was a sign I was looking for. She didn't have to chase us down. We never saw her, nor would we have. She must have wanted to speak to us. She leaned down and talked to the kids, then asked us our plans. She gave us some advise on where to go and what we should do. I let her know I was happy to see her finally not working. I thought about asking her to join us for lunch but I didn't want her to feel she had to spend her time off with her customers. Though a small part of me still wishes I had asked.





After our last dinner I thanked Natalya for her service with the customary tip. I also gave her some pictures I had printed of her dancing with my son. Not because I thought she wanted a memory of my son but because I wanted her to see what we saw. We saw her as a person. A person that brought joy to the people she encountered, as did most of the crew. She added value to people's lives beyond the service she was paid to do. Maybe she knew this already. Maybe she didn't care. She might of even gone back to her cabin and thrown the pictures in the trash but for some reason I don't think she did. It really doesn't matter. What matters is she knows that we know and that knowledge is hers to do with as she pleases. But I do hope it pleases her as much as it did my son... and me.

December 28, 2008

Blog closed, I'm getting a tan :)

Hee, hee

I'm not here, I'm actually on a cruise in the Caribbean.



I just left some music so you wouldn't forget me.

June 23, 2008

A Sinking Feeling


Last year for Christmas my side of the family went on a Disney cruise. Everything went so well my parents wanted to take another one. I knew going in it was going to be a problem. Despite my best attempts to head off the feared situation, it unfolded the exact way I was afraid it would.

My sister is not going to be able to go. Fair enough, I counted on that. She says it's because of work but I know it's because of the married man she's been dating. Of course the rest of the family knows nothing about this. While I don't like it, at all, she is an adult and it is her life. So even though she has decided not to go, she expects and damn near demands we take her two children.

The Wife and I had anticipated this and requested that if she wasn't going that her children should not go as well. I know this sounds mean, cruel and nasty but we're not trying to be.

The reality...

If her children go The wife and I, and mainly The Wife, will have to shoulder most of the responsibility. That would be five children under the age of nine to watch, dress, feed and the other thousands of things children require.

My parents are just hitting their seventies and I seriously doubt they are a match for an eight and six year old on a seven day vacation.

My brother and his wife barely speak with my sister and can not be counted on for any help. They might but I doubt it. Their seventeen year old daughter will help but how much can you count on a teenager to do while on her own vacation?

We will be traveling out of the country to places with open water as well as other dangerous situations. Accidents happen even when you're doing everything right. I couldn't live with myself if something happen to my nieces under my care.

I think my sister is asking us to take on too much responsibility for no real purpose other than to get some alone time with her boyfriend. We did suggest her ex-husband could go, so it's not like we don't want her children with us. She shut that suggestion down immediately. Apparently she hates his guts and has for the past ten years. She doesn't want us to have any contact with him, ever. Funny I can still remember her telling me she was divorcing him because he deserved better and how fantastic he was.

So it's looking like the whole vacation idea is going to be scrapped. My parents say they can't face their grandchildren if they don't take them and my sister tells them it's their fault. Me, I could care less if we go but it does piss me off to have my sister ruin it for everyone else and that we turn out looking like the bastards, again.

April 21, 2008

Feeling Fishy



This weekend the family went up to Atlanta to see the world's largest Aquarium, the Georgia Aquarium. The whole experience confirmed something I've known about myself for a long time. As I watched all the people crowding around the tanks and glass to see the beautiful aquatic wildlife I couldn't help thinking, "Damn, I hate Fn' crowds."


I was envious of the fish in the tanks. They had more room than I did. Now I know what sardines feel like packed in a can.

April 04, 2008

Knowledge Bling



Last weekend I had the pleasure of driving down to the Kennedy Space Center, NASA, to spend the night with my son and his Boy Scout Troop. We had an amazing time. I won't bore you with the details but the highlight of the trip was sleeping under a Saturn 5 rocket. Not just any rocket but the most powerful rocket ever built.

Our guide for the two days we were there was Sam. Sam was a middle aged man with no outstanding features at all. In most other settings I would not have paid him much attention but I have to say at NASA, Sam was the man. Before he even spoke I knew he was special. I could tell by the way he carried himself and his confidence that I was going to enjoy being around him. I was not disappointed either. He was a wealth of information, he was smart and funny. He knew how to unload vast amounts of information to me... oh, and the kids of course, lets not forget why we were there. It was all about for the children, honestly. Anyway, he delivered information in an entertaining yet productive way.






There was something about him I should have picked up on right away but I didn't. When I heard him tell another parent he was an fifth grade teacher it came as no surprise. I've always thought teachers were a special bunch. People who deserved our respect for the incredibly important job they do. Yes there are bad ones, but as a whole I think they have a little special something. Call it knowledge bling or something.

One thing I've always pondered is if I think teachers are special because they really are or because teachers are one of our earliest adult role models and figures of authority. I think Sam helped me answer that question this weekend. I knew he was first class, I knew he "had it" before I knew he was a teacher and even before I knew he would be teaching us for the next two days. Another mystery of the universe solved. Now if someone could just explain to me why Paris Hilton is famous?

On a side note I had a chance to talk to Sam a little one on one that night. I think I held my on on topics such as relativity, gravity and thrust. I think Daughter would be proud.

February 18, 2008

What, me worry?

At the end of the week the wife is going to Mexico. No she's not running away from me, at least not yet. My sister has a company groupthink thing there and is allowed to take another person. Since it's all paid for she asked the wife because she thought she could use a break from the kids. Hey, what about me? I'm joking of course, I think the wife deserves some time off too. I'm very excited for her.


So I get to play Mr. Mom for five days and I'm looking forward to it. I'm thinking about sleeping out in the almost-completed-playroom one night with the kids to christen it. It should be a blast.

My only concern about the whole situation is that the wife will be spending time with my man hating sister. The last thing I need is my sister's recent attitude towards men rubbing off on the wife. I have no doubt that in the corporate environment that they will be in my sister will only be to happy to point out all the men who have stood in the way of her career. How women don't need men and how only weak women would place themselves in a position to depend on a man. And it may be true in her case but that's not our world, nor do I want it to be.

The wife and I have managed to create a life where we see and treat each other as equal partners in family, obligations and life. The wife does know my sister is bitter right now and she is not easily influenced. She's a pretty strong person when it comes to forming her own opinions. She's just going to have fun and get away, so I'm not worried... much... at all.

January 18, 2008

Adrift on the ocean



On our recent cruise I spent a lot of time with my sister. My sister who has now been divorced for about six months.


Some of you may remember that she divorced her husband because he was such a wonderful man and he deserved a woman that would treat him the way a wife should treat a husband. Realizing that she never would, my sister divorced him. Despite the fact he was willing to stay and work it out.


During the days we spent together she, more than once, assured me that she was the happiest she had ever been in her life. She loved her job, her children and her new found freedom. This was what she was saying anyway.


It's pretty obvious to me that she is lost and just drifting in the wind like a boat in the ocean with no oars, no direction, no plan. As most people know, the more information you are given the better chance you have of putting together a clearer picture of a situation. Lets just say by the end of the cruise the picture was crystal clear.


My sister is a very strong willed, private person. She does not give personal information out freely. You have to listen and catch the little pieces. Three days was enough for me to know I wasn't buying what she was selling.


The evidence:


  • She was reading not one but three self help books. Now there is nothing wrong with that but they were all books about finding direction in life. Not exactly a topic you would think someone, who just got everything she ever wanted, would be reading.

  • She casually mentioned, out of the blue, that she found it odd after ten years of marriage her ex husband was willing to change his behavior that was causing the marriage to end. He begged but she told him it was too late. WTF? I thought to myself when I heard this. I thought he was suppose to be this great guy and she was the problem? Seems we are starting to revise that part of history now.

  • Still being a friend of her ex husband, the father of my nieces, I asked if he had started dating anyone? She snapped back "don't know, don't care, not my problem." Sheesh, if she doesn't care why is she getting so damn mad about it. That was the first time in three days I had even mentioned him.

So at the end of the cruise, after we passed through customs and were ready to go our separate ways home, I hugged her and told her if she needed anything to give me a call. She won't of course because in her mind that would be admitting weakness. I was happy with the time we got to spend together. The bond we share as brother and sister was a little stronger than it was before. As she walked away, carrying her heavy baggage, I noticed a lack of stability in her step. I wanted to run over and take some of the baggage in my hand to ease her burden but I knew she wouldn't let me.

Hopefully, one day soon, she'll put some of that baggage down and be able to take hold of her oars again.

December 31, 2007

I'm baaaaack :)




Hellooo everybody out there in blog world.

I didn't mention the vacation because we were so busy with Christmas and I honestly wasn't excited about it.

My dad, who will turn 70 on his next birthday, wanted all his children and their families to be together for the holidays so he gave us a cruise for Christmas. My family, my brother, his wife and children (a 17 year old girl and 14 year old twin boys), my sister, her two girls (7 and 5), and my parents all went on a Disney cruise.


A strange mix of personalities but it worked and for the most part my dad got his moneys worth. The ship was fun, the Bahamas was amazing and the fact that Disney has their own island now is incredible.


The cruise was another reason why it sucked for the wife (and me) to get sick right before Christmas. In the end it didn't affect us to much and we had a good time. I'll post a few pictures for now. I'll blog anything noteworthy later.

December 26, 2007

Closed

This blog is closed due to a much needed vacation.



WE ARE GOING ON SEA CRUISE!



A Disney Cruise to be exact.

This blog will return to it's irregularly scheduled post New Years Eve.