Married couples taking separate vacations

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schoolteacher68

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Well as the title pretty much says, are there any married couples here who take separate vacations (not business trips but personal vacations) for whatever reason…just curious how your spouse feels about it and the reasons for doing so in the first place…TIA and God bless…😃
 
No. And I just asked my husband about it and he was as horrified as I was. That kind of vacation time and money is not used to spend time apart. Alone time is coffee shop and a book time and money, not several days off work and hundreds or thousands of dollars.
 
I think there are some circumstances where thus might be understandable - maybe not a “vacation” per se, but something like a few days. One spouse might have a hobby (antique cars, stamps, fountain pens, military aircraft, model trains, fashion design, etc.) that would drive the other spouse insane with boredom. I can see one spouse heading off to a major such show or special exhibit in another place for several days with the glad blessing of the spouse who remains at home.
 
I think there are some circumstances where thus might be understandable - maybe not a “vacation” per se, but something like a few days. One spouse might have a hobby (antique cars, stamps, fountain pens, military aircraft, model trains, fashion design, etc.) that would drive the other spouse insane with boredom. I can see one spouse heading off to a major such show or special exhibit in another place for several days with the glad blessing of the spouse who remains at home.
I tend to agree with this. My uncle likes to go hunting with the guys. My auny wouldn’t be caught dead on a hunting trip. They have a good marriage
 
Sometimes a retreat is a good thing to do alone- either solo or separated by gender. It can be a weekend or longer and may be in a somewhat distant location. Ditto with a pilgrimage. Although a couple is married and has a spiritual life together, the wife/husband also has an individual relationship with God and it is healthy to nourish that.
 
My husband could see going on a long weekend trip with the guys for golfing or camping. But longer than that or alone would be weird to him. Similar would be a women’s conference or retreat with me and my friends.

In a few months I’ll be going on a trip by myself for my sister’s wedding. It would be too expensive to bring everyone. I don’t count that as a vacation, though getting to go to the bathroom for several days totally alone may feel like a vacation. 😉

I think for a defined purpose it can be OK. But it shouldn’t substitute for time as a couple or family, and the other spouse shouldn’t have qualms about the trip.
 
My friend and I have gone to Europe for three weeks without our husbands but with their blessing. One wouldn’t be caught dead on a plane for that long the other couldn’t get that much time off. Neither would have been happy in churches and museums or staying in hostels the way we did.

We’re hoping to go on another trip, to England, Ireland, and Scotland this time, if we can get enough funds together. We spend lots of time with our husbands.
 
We’re okay with it, particularly when it’s with members of our extended family. For example, a girls trip with my mom and sisters to New Orleans for a long weekend. Or a hunting trip for my husband with his cousins. My husband’s family live in another state so there’s the potential for him to go up alone for family events that we can’t afford for us all to attend. That being said, these are few and far between, and we always take at least one trip together as a family.
 
No. And I just asked my husband about it and he was as horrified as I was. That kind of vacation time and money is not used to spend time apart. Alone time is coffee shop and a book time and money, not several days off work and hundreds or thousands of dollars.
What about the very occasional trip / vacation with a same-sex close friend?
 
I couldn’t imagine my wife giving me a ticket to go anywhere on my own,
She would suspect I’d get totally lost and end up in Africa somewhere when I was ment to go to Katoomba ,
Do yourself a favour and Google Earth Katoomba , it’s a really nice place to visit,

Having said that, I’d love to drive around the coastline of this great country by myself ,
Yes , all by myself,won’t ever happen I know,
 
My husband could see going on a long weekend trip with the guys for golfing or camping. But longer than that or alone would be weird to him. Similar would be a women’s conference or retreat with me and my friends.

In a few months I’ll be going on a trip by myself for my sister’s wedding. It would be too expensive to bring everyone. I don’t count that as a vacation, though getting to go to the bathroom for several days totally alone may feel like a vacation. 😉

I think for a defined purpose it can be OK. But it shouldn’t substitute for time as a couple or family, and the other spouse shouldn’t have qualms about the trip.
Yeah, at some point there are a lot of financial and logistical issues involved in going long distance as a whole family.

We are planning our first long long distance trip as a family of five for this summer, and our youngest is almost 4.5–it’s been nearly four years since she’s been on a plane. We’ve done one or two night road trips for the five of us for a number of years now, but this is a 7-day trip with plane tickets for all of us. Because we’re going to be staying in hotels and renting a van, it’s going to cost in excess of $4k without anything especially amazing happening. (As I whined to my sister, “It’s going to cost as much as Disneyland and we aren’t going to Disneyland!” But, duty calls–our grandparents aren’t getting any younger.)

Here’s some of the non-business travel that we’ve done separately over the years:

–I visit my family on the West Coast with 1-2 kids nearly every year (about a week)
–My husband visits his family on the West Coast with 1-2 kids nearly every year (about a week)
–I’ve visited an old Peace Corps buddy a couple of times (2-3 nights)
–I’ve done maybe a 2 night trip with my grandparents and great-aunt visiting my second cousin

We haven’t gotten the green light for visiting in-laws as a family of five–I think my FIL’s health and nerves would not be up to it. They may never be up to it…

For years, I was planning to go and visit old friends in the Russian Far East with my Peace Corps buddy (that would probably have been a week), but first she couldn’t go and then I couldn’t go (Baby Girl) and then the Russian-US political situation got weird, so I’m shelving that idea for now and have a different plan.

ukulelemag.com/stories/uke-in-n-cruisin-part-vacation-part-immersive-workshop-ukulele-themed-cruises-are-taking-off

The plan is that my teenager (who is quite the ukulele player) and I will do a ukulele cruise to Alaska together. If I can scrape up the extra money, I’ll take Middle Kid and Baby Girl, too. This will probably be in 2-3 years. What about my husband, you ask? First of all, unlike myself, husband hates travel (he has to travel a lot for work). Secondly, he dislikes the sound of the ocean. I haven’t completely given up the idea of getting him to come with the rest of us, but it would be him doing me a BIG favor, not the other way around.

My husband has been to Paris, Prague and Santiago, Chile for work. I would love it. He suffers SO MUCH. As time goes by, I expect we will probably start combining his work travel and our family travel as we occasionally did pre-kids/when we had a smaller family.

Edited to add: One nuance to our situation is that since my husband is a professor and lives on an academic calendar, he has a lot of flexibility. Hence, if I go away for a week and he goes away for a different week, we haven’t burned through all of our vacation for the year.
 
My wife and I had never spent more than one night apart for over twenty years, and we had only done that about three times. I never understood married people who regularly take off on their own for several days or more. It seems pretty common.

And I don’t mean to insult anyone by typing this, because different strokes for different folks, but I sort of regard the whole “vacation with the girlfriends” or “guys trip” as something you mature out of when you get married. :o

All that being said, I have a confession to make. A guilty confession. Several weeks ago my wife needed to leave town to take care of some stuff with her parents, and I was looking forward to not having her around the house for a few days. 😊
 
My wife and I had never spent more than one night apart for over twenty years, and we had only done that about three times. I never understood married people who regularly take off on their own for several days or more. It seems pretty common.

And I don’t mean to insult anyone by typing this, because different strokes for different folks, but I sort of regard the whole “vacation with the girlfriends” or “guys trip” as something you mature out of when you get married. :o

All that being said, I have a confession to make. A guilty confession. Several weeks ago my wife needed to leave town to take care of some stuff with her parents, and I was looking forward to not having her around the house for a few days. 😊
!!!

I like getting a break from being with ALL of the kids. It’s relatively restful to take two-school age kids to see my family and MIL, as opposed to being home with Baby Girl for that week. The big kids are a lot more chill.
 
Not married myself, but my mother makes trips overseas (of a few weeks at a time) to see her family every 2 years or so. Not always with Dad, who is not fond of travel at the best of times. They have a very solid fifty years plus of marriage.

Marriage doesn’t mean you have to be joined at the hip 🙂
 
Not married myself, but my mother makes trips overseas (of a few weeks at a time) to see her family every 2 years or so. Not always with Dad, who is not fond of travel at the best of times. They have a very solid fifty years plus of marriage.

Marriage doesn’t mean you have to be joined at the hip 🙂
Yeah. After 40 years of marriage I would hope that taking a trip with a friend for a few weeks wouldn’t make a big difference. We travel as a couple for at least a few weeks a year now that he’s retired and my summers are free.
 
And I don’t mean to insult anyone by typing this, because different strokes for different folks, but I sort of regard the whole “vacation with the girlfriends” or “guys trip” as something you mature out of when you get married. :o
I don’t know about anyone else but “vacations with the girlfriends” are not something I did when I was young.
 
We’re okay with it, particularly when it’s with members of our extended family. For example, a girls trip with my mom and sisters to New Orleans for a long weekend. Or a hunting trip for my husband with his cousins. My husband’s family live in another state so there’s the potential for him to go up alone for family events that we can’t afford for us all to attend. That being said, these are few and far between, and we always take at least one trip together as a family.
/\ What Allegra said, is just about our experience.

My oldest and I went to NYC for Thanksgiving as a ‘girls’ trip, and my husband and youngest went on a cruise. Our first ‘vacation’ apart.

My dh knew how much I loved NYC but he’s health at the time prevented him from walking much, and I am bored to tears on a cruise.

Every year my husband takes a long weekend golf trip. Usually five days or so. He recently came back from his latest annual trip. I actually encourage this. He has some very good Christian friends he goes with and although their destination is Sin City, the most sinning they’re doing is overindulging in dessert.

I still don’t like being apart, and my heart fluttered when I saw him again. 🙂

My husband often flew home for short weekends to visit his grandparents when they were alive and too weak to make the trip to see us. Likewise I took a short trip to see my grandmother shortly before she died with my little kids.

So, I’m not really ‘in favor’ of separate vacations in my life, but occasional trips for pleasure/events might be okay for many people. We also usually take getaway trips together as a family.
 
My wife and I had never spent more than one night apart for over twenty years, and we had only done that about three times. I never understood married people who regularly take off on their own for several days or more. It seems pretty common.

And I don’t mean to insult anyone by typing this, because different strokes for different folks, but I sort of regard the whole “vacation with the girlfriends” or “guys trip” as something you mature out of when you get married. :o

All that being said, I have a confession to make. A guilty confession. Several weeks ago my wife needed to leave town to take care of some stuff with her parents, and I was looking forward to not having her around the house for a few days. 😊
That’s pretty amazing.
Of course many couples are separated out of necessity. My wife and I are apart at least half the time…because of my work. Its always been like this. Since before the engagement. So I guess we knew what we were getting into. With modern technology (FaceTime comes to mind), its also a lot different than it would have been a couple decades ago.
In terms of maturing out of vacations with friends when married…I dunno. I don’t seem to recall having many opportunities to vacation with friends when I was single and in my early 20s mid-20s…busy with work and school. I am now 30. Where I live, most 30 year olds seem to still be single…so its all relative. I am going on a trip with a guy friend for a few days in a week. This will be the first time I’ve done such since getting married.
 
I don’t know about anyone else but “vacations with the girlfriends” are not something I did when I was young.
Precisely. For some people it is more feasible when older than when young. I both worked and studied full-time when I was in my early 20s. Now as a working married professional, I actually have more opportunities to get away.
 
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