I’m bemused, but no longer surprised, by the reaction to my solo travels from the Momosphere. It’s usually some version of “That looks awesome but I could never do it.” Taking out those who are just being polite (IE those for whom it doesn’t look awesome), the “I could never do it” usually comes down to one of three things: money, time, or fear of traveling alone.
Most of my blog is about the creative things I do to make the finances work and this whole trip was completed in 48 hours, so today I’m going to talk about #3: facing the fear of solo travel and doing it anyway.
Moms, why am I so passionate about you traveling by yourself? Because Girlfriend’s getaways are great, for what they are. But I don’t want you to be limited by others…and why should you be? Isn’t there somewhere you’ve always wanted to go that no else has an interest in? Also, it’s hard enough for YOU to get childcare, budget, and a plan. If you wait around for a girlfriend, sister, or whoever else, you may never get off the ground!
Now I get it: fear is irrational. Telling you, for example, that plane travel is statistically safer than driving to the airport does nothing for you if you’re afraid of flying. And telling you that most hotels have wifi now so your family can skype you (or vice versa) in real time does nothing to calm you if you’re afraid your kids will befall some calamity requiring Mommy at the exact moment you decide to leave the country for the 1st time. But you’re a good parent who chooses good proxies, right?
So now on to some real-life tips to help you rip off the band-aid for that first solo weekend.
Solo travel tips for Mom’s first weekend away
- When you’re keeping it short, destination choice is essential. Keep it a non-stop flight if at all possible. Use this post to help you decide where to go. For instance, when choosing Mexico City, I knew I wanted sun and non-stop, and it fit the checklist.
- Overschedule. Sleep when you get home. Go ahead and book two tours in one day. It may look nuts on paper, but chances are at least one of them will not run (one of my 2 booked tours didn’t run and the other started an hour late on a Mexico City trip). Worse comes to worse, you can cancel on them. At least then you have the power. (By the way, this is NOT advice I give or take on longer trips, but when it’s an “ambush” type trip, ya gotta do what ya gotta do!)
- Expect your body to fail you. Happens to me Every. Single. Trip. This time it was a cough and cold that made my laughably border Mexican accent pretty much inaudible. Just suck it up and take a shot of local medicine: it makes for a better story!
- Yes, Wine is cheaper than water. Still stick to 2 glasses. Same goes for shady cabs, after-clubs, handsome strangers. Nuff Said.
- Beware GCS. Gilded Cage Syndrome, the dreaded disease that strikes every five star traveler at one point, will put the kibosh on all of your grand plans to explore unless you nip it in the bud.To fight it on my most recent trip, I bypassed the Hyatt and St. Regis on purpose in favor of a Holiday Inn in a great location. My hotel was safe and had a terrific view, but the room was not SO spectacular that I felt trapped in it. On the other hand, if 48 hours locked in a hotel suite is what you NEED, ignore this advice, cancel the flight, and just drive yourself to the nearest five-star hotel.
- Checklist: Sunscreen (I have missed this one!), cell phone sized cross-body, photocopy of passport (also save a copy to your Google Drive), ATM Card (withdraw foreign currency at airport, spend what’s left at duty free), carry-on (DO NOT check a bag for a weekend trip), and two credit cards (one to carry and one for the hotel safe).
- Helpful apps: XE Currency, Google Translate, your airline app (to track delays)
You CAN do this! Where are you going to go first?