Teens and Family Travel
A time for adventure and bonding
In her book See Jane Win, Sylvia Rimm asked women who considered themselves both happy and successful to look back on and describe their childhoods. In this manner, she hoped to identify common behaviors and attitudes that made a critical difference to these women's eventual success and happiness.The second most frequently cited experience by Rimm's respondents, across all developmental levels and careers, was family travel. Participants said that family travel was a time of adventure and bonding. These findings fit in with our discussion of stretching your comfort zones together. Travel, by its nature, is an intentional stretching of the comfort zone, so it only makes sense that travel to new places as a family strengthens your connection to your teenager.
Kids who feel alienated from their families often discover aspects of deep kinship during a family trip, levels of connection that had previously gone undetected. This is especially so when the travel takes the family to a foreign culture. There are several reasons for this.
First, everyone in the family is more or less equal in their ability to learn and adapt to the ways, subtle and not so subtle, of this new culture. Sure, the parents are still the parents, but that doesn't mean they will be the ones to figure out the local train schedule, greeting customs, or how to order lunch. Furthermore, families are united together as they work to figure out and explore this new environment. This is when many of the at-home differences between parents and teenagers simply slip away.
Second, many people travel to learn about different approaches to life and to discover or reconnect with aspects of themselves. Some love the feel of their curiosity as it is stimulated by a new culture. Others rediscover a resourcefulness they had forgotten about. Some experience travel as a respite from long-held assumptions and the opportunity for reflection. All these lay the groundwork for new and deeper connections among family members, especially between parents and teenagers. Not only that, but it is during this family travel that you will see, often for the first time, some wonderful and unexpected qualities in your teenager, qualities that you were blinded to by the normal routine of home.
- It's so bizarre, but when we went abroad with Jason, all his eating habits changed. At home he adheres to the typical male adolescent diet of burgers, pizza, soda, and the like. But when we were away, he insisted on eating all the local dishes and vehemently eschewed his normal diet. But the real crazy part is that as soon as we got back home to the States, it was right back to burgers, pizza, and soda.
And,
At home Sarah lives on the phone and the Internet, usually at the same time, and is totally dependent on us or friends for transportation. She would never think of using the local bus lines. But recently, when we visited New York City as a family, this all changed. Suddenly, she was an explorer. She got a map of the subway system and led us all around the citySarah and her map. Now we were dependent on her! This was a side to her that was brand new to all of us, but knowing it's there is a great relief, especially when we think about her going off to college next year.
- A couple of years ago, Barry got into learning everything he could about bullfighting. I think it was something he picked up from one of his history teachers. Anyway, at his bequest, we planned a summer vacation to Spain, all built around the traditional running of the bulls at the fiesta of San Fermin in July. (Don't worry, before we even purchased the tickets, we made him promise not even to ask us if he could participate in the run!) The whole trip was built around the themes of matadors and bulls, from a visit to the Bullfighting Museum in Bilbao to attending a bullfight at the bullring in Seville.
The trip was a huge success for all of us. Even before we left, we saw a different side to Barry because he did all the research and most of the planning of the trip. That was our agreement from the beginning. He was incredible. Hard to believe it was the same kid who has waited until the last second on every long-term project he has ever had. He printed out historical information on some of the events that we were attending so that we could appreciate them more. He even cranked up his efforts in Spanish to get ready for the tripgoing from a steadfast B-minus student to an A student in one quarter. It was so relaxing, like having your own in-house tour guide.
We came back from that trip a much closer family, and that sense of intimacy has only faded a tiny bit in the six months since.
Finally, the reason travel is effective is because it stretches everyone's comfort zones, which means you don't necessarily have to go to exotic regions all over the world to have this experience. Sometimes it's a weekend in the big city near where you live, or a weekend away from the city and in the country. In other words, it's closer than you think.
More on: Family Vacations
Excerpted from:
Copyright © 2003 by Michael Riera. Excerpted from Staying Connected to Your Teenager with permission of its publisher, Perseus Books Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
To order this book visit perseusbooksgroup.com.
