8 Responses to “Essential Rules for Traveling Light in Marriage”

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  1. Laurie Laurie

    I love the analogy. A great post. Carrying the baggage instead of the baby wipes is a fatal flaw. One I was making until I went over my travel plans with you! :O) You are a great travel agent!

  2. To make some of these anology work shows that you are a gifted writer. We have five children and have traveled with them extensively. You are right Pack light and bring extra wipes, tissue and a first aid kit.

  3. I recently found your site through Zen Habits. I’m enjoying your posts and have added your blog to my Life Balance blog directory. I’m traveling with my family next week and will be sure to grab your checklist!

  4. Connie Connie

    I got a Sutemi Pack for travelling with my son when he was about 10 months old. We’ve done 6 round trips with it. It forces us to edit what we carry because it all has to hang off me somehow. It’s easy to pop him in and out. Sometimes, the TSA people at the airports let me wear him through the security gate, which makes getting through security much easier. Doing this, we’ve done a week’s travel using carry-ons only — except for the car seat, which we always gate check.

    As my son’s gotten older, we got him a small backpack. Now he picks out a toy or two and a book or two to bring along. We also take along freeze dried fruit from Just Tomatoes — especially Just Strawberries and Just Bananas. They go into Ziploc bags in the backpack. Now whenever we go out, my son wants to carry his backpack. He feels so proud, helping us take care of his things.

    Leading up to the trip, we take a few days and try to talk about what we’re going to do in a certain amount of detail. We especially talk about what our son is probably going to have to do as we travel. This gets him involved and — once we mention that he gets to fly on an airplane — motivated to help.

    What else? A friend of mine has an iPhone onto which she’s ripped her son’s favorite DVDs — without the commercials. This seems to work pretty well as emergency diversion, so long as she keeps him from throwing it around. We have a TiVo and I’ve downloaded a few of my son’s favorite programs onto my computer using TiVo to go. When trips get long and he wants to be entertained when we have no energy, I’ll put one of those on. It buys me about 25 minutes to nap.

    I think that covers the best of what we’ve learned in 2 years of traveling with our boy. Good luck and happy traveling!

  5. @ Connie- Great thoughts. I will have to check out the Tivo to go and put programs on the laptop. Won’t have to carry DVDs then. I have a friend who does the same thing with his iPhone. Works pretty well.

Trackbacks

  1. [...] Marriage Project presents the Essential Rules of Traveling Light in Marriage. My wife and I love to travel. These tips will come in [...]

  2. [...] Marriage Project presents the Essential Rules of Traveling Light in Marriage. My wife and I love to travel. These tips will come in [...]

  3. [...] written on some of my family’s travel previously, and this post is not intended to be a guide for family travel. Instead I want to introduce an idea [...]



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