1 month ago
Monday, July 31, 2017
Running away from home is good for you
Thursday, something amazing happened: I took a trip with my two best friends from college, Hedy and Wendy. Amazing because we had great fun, but also because we actually made it happen. It's been about twenty years since we went away together. Incredibly, we are all only 23 years old!
The timing worked: Max and Sabrina are in camp. Ben promised he wouldn't jump off the couches if Dave watched him for four days. OK, technically Ben didn't promise that but he and Dave were out and about in the park, the zoo and other places with no couches to jump off of, so all was good.
We headed to Saratoga Springs, New York. We stayed at an old hotel that was supposed to be charming but was mainly just old but who cared. We got massages then lounged at the gorgeous pool in the state park and tried to be deviant by sneaking in a bottle of wine only we didn't have an opener. We ate really good food and really good bad food (hi, gigantic cinnamon bun at Sweet Mimi's). We browsed cute shops and a farmers market. We took a ranger tour of the state park. We Facebook-stalked and Google-stalked people we'd gone to school with. We sampled honey and cheese and wines and water laced with turpentine or, rather, how naturally carbonated water from the mineral springs tasted to me, although it is said to have health properties. The still, spring water from the State Seal Fountain was seriously good—locals lined up to pour it into jugs.
We were not on any schedule, another highlight of the trip. Also: I left my computer at home and otherwise attempted to unplug.
I felt relaxed, rejuvenated and happy very so much, as Max would say.
I wondered: Why should it take a trip away to make me feel this good? How often does that happen? (See: Once every 20 years.) Don't I deserve to occasionally put my own needs ahead of my family's? Doesn't that analogy about the importance of putting the oxygen mask over your own face before you place it on your kids' make me roll my eyes but yet: so true?
Then I came home and spent three hours doing chores.
Still, if I don't find the fun, no Fairy Fun Godmother is going to help me.
In other words, if you'd like to go taste wines, I'm in.
Labels:
girls trip
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Hello Ellen, it will hurt my feelings, if by some reasons you stop writing great things about Max........
ReplyDeleteplease i beg of you, don't stop writing beautiful things about the love of your child.........
check my Profile pic and you will see what i mean
thanks for reading through
Hello! The child in your profile pic is adorable. I'm not going anywhere!
DeleteI'm always up for some wine tasting!!!! Looks like you girls had a GOOD trip!
ReplyDeleteLET'S GO WINE TASTING!
DeleteI grew up in Saratoga Springs! So glad you got to spend time in a place that I personally, REALLY love!
ReplyDeletePaige
http://thehappyflammily.com
What a cool place to grow up in. My dad took us there when we were kids, I've always had a fond place in my heart for it. I could use some coffee from Uncommon Grounds right now!
DeleteGood for you!!!! My husband and I just spent one night away (less than 24 hours) for our anniversary, but it was amazing. We stayed at the Hermitage Hotel in Nashville, ate good good I didn't haven't to cook, and slept in (ish). It was the reset I needed.
ReplyDeleteYAY! Several days later, I am still feeling reset (great word!), hope the feeling has lasted for you, too.
DeleteIt was such a great weekend because we were together. Time with your best friends is absolutely precious. I also loved that everything we did was something that my kids would never have appreciated. Nice to focus on ourselves for four days in a row!!!! Miss you guys already!!! Thanks for being the best friends anyone could hope for.
ReplyDeleteThere really is nothing like hanging with your best friends. A week later, I'm still on a high. And yeah, none of our kids would want to taste-test fancy olive oils and vinegars or get massages, so we'll have to do that next year! xo
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