DEAR SOMEONE ELSE’S MOM: When my son and daughter-in-law told us they wanted to do a family vacation this year, my wife and I were thrilled. We both recently retired, and it was going to be the first time ever when we could just go off and enjoy ourselves without having to worry about facing all the catch-up at work when we returned.
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What we didn’t find out until we got to the Florida resort they picked out was that it was a “clothing optional” resort, with “fun for the whole family!” Our six- and four-year-old grandkids were along, as were our son’s wife’s parents, who seemed just fine with it all, even though they, like us, didn’t choose to go au naturel in public.
It would have been funny if we didn’t spend so much time blushing, and to see our daughter-in-law and adult son in the raw was something we could have lived their rest of our lives not having to do.
I know it’s partially on us for not doing some homework before we signed on, but since it was a whole family vacation, it never crossed our minds that it would be so “different,” as my wife politely said.
Don’t you think it would have been nice of our son and his wife to give us a little warning? I can tell you I’ll never trust them to make vacation arrangements again! --- PREFER BEING DRESSED
DEAR PREFER BEING DRESSED: I agree it would have been nice to give you guys a heads-up about what you were getting into.
However, it sounds like you’ve already learned a valuable lesson in how a little research of your own can go a long way when someone proposes a destination with which you’re not personally acquainted.
Maybe next time a multi-generational family vacation is proposed, you and your wife should do the picking and arrangement-making.