I have been on vacation, which means two things happened. First, I tried to relax. Second, I accidentally studied humanity like I was working on a graduate thesis in public behavior, bad decisions, matching shirts, stroller politics, cruise ship confidence, and the strange things people do when they are released from their normal environment and handed a lanyard.
So consider this a warning label. Over the next few posts, I am probably going to write about some of the things I saw, heard, questioned, laughed at, judged a little, judged a lot, and then tried to understand. Because vacation is not just about beaches, rides, buffets, pool chairs, sunscreen, and overpriced drinks. Vacation is where people reveal who they really are.
At home, most people have structure. Jobs. Schedules. School drop-offs. Meetings. Bills. Normal clothes. Basic social expectations. But put those same people on a cruise ship, in a theme park, at a resort, or anywhere with unlimited soft serve ice cream, and suddenly all bets are off.
You see dads who finally step up and become the stroller-pushing, bag-carrying, family-guiding heroes they were meant to be. You also see kids old enough to file taxes being pushed around like royalty in a stroller while their parents look like they are training for a hostage negotiation.
You see people dressed like they are invading a beach they have only seen twice in their lives. You see adults fighting children for the magic of childhood. You see families who are either making memories or barely surviving the itinerary they created for themselves.
And you see a whole lot of people who make you ask one simple question: “Are we all seeing this, or is it just me?”
That is the beauty of people watching on vacation. Nobody thinks they are part of the show, but everybody is. The matching family shirts. The overpacked beach wagon. The dad who looks defeated by noon. The mom who has planned every second since February. The teenagers pretending they are too cool while still asking for snacks. The grown adults losing their minds over themed cups, characters, wristbands, and priority access to things they do not fully understand.
And yes, before anyone gets offended, I know I am probably part of someone else’s observation list too. Somewhere, someone probably saw me and thought, “Look at this guy. He looks like he is mentally writing a blog while standing in line for something he doesn’t understand.”
They would be correct.
Because that is what vacation does to me. It gives me time to think. It gives me space to notice things. It gives me a front-row seat to human behavior when people are tired, excited, sunburned, overstimulated, under-caffeinated, over-sugared, and spending money like the credit card bill is going to be mailed to a different family.
The posts coming up are not meant to be mean. Well, not entirely.
They are meant to be honest. Funny. A little sarcastic. Maybe a little uncomfortable. But also fair. Because buried under all the nonsense are real questions about parenting, marriage, responsibility, technology, security, entitlement, common sense, and what happens when people forget how to function without someone else organizing every part of their day.
Vacation gives you a break from normal life. It also gives you a microscope.
And once you start noticing things, it is hard to stop.
So yes, the vacation observation posts are coming. Some will be funny. Some will probably sound like an old man yelling at a stroller. Some may accidentally make a good point. A few might even make people mad, which usually means I got close to something true.
But that is part of the fun.
Because sometimes the best part of vacation is not the ride, the show, the beach, the ship, or the destination.
Sometimes it is standing there, looking around, and quietly thinking:
“What in the absolute hell are these people doing?”
