Next week my family is heading out on a family vacation to the big D…Disneyland . The girls are already bonkers and Paul and I are, well, resolved. We know the girls will have a great time, but we also know that the car trip, tired kids, sugar highs (and subsequent crashes), will take their toll. I think Paul summed up our shared trepidation best when he asked me the other night: “Do they sell booze at Disneyland?”
No, we aren’t alcoholics. No, we don’t want the Happiest Place on Earth spoiled by the drunkest people in Orange County. We just know that it will be a loooooong four days in the park. There will, however, be wine and a portable DVD player in the hotel room.
Despite my curmudgeon-sounding sentiments, I am thrilled and delighted to be spearheading this effort. I have (of course) made all of the arrangements, purchased all of the tickets (including those for the Long Beach Aquarium for when we are sick of the big mouse), and have started packing. Paul and I have fielded literally hundreds of questions and have shown the girls clips of the “scarier” rides on YouTube to reduce the freak-out factor (I am sure this effort will prove futile as the Haunted Mansion doors open). I even took them to the nail salon for “vacation toenails” and arranged for lunch with the princesses. Yes, in spite of my efforts to breed tomboys, my two girls were bodysnatched by the Disney Marketing Machine while in utero and are currently in love with the Disney Princess franchise.
Sigh.
Yet all of my hard work and preparation is dripping with irony. Real irony, not the Alanis Morisette version. Why? Because as most moms know, Walt Disney apparently had an inner hatred of mothers. Virtually every mother in every Disney movie is mysteriously absent (emotionally or physically), dead, or ends up dead.
- Dumbo —mother carted away in the beginning
- Bambi —mother killed in the beginning
- Finding Nemo —mother killed in the beginning
- Snow White —mother dead at the start of the movie
- Cinderella —mother dead at the start of the movie
- Beauty and the Beast —mother dead at the start of the movie
- Aladdin —mother dead at the start of the movie
- Sleeping Beauty —mother abandons her child to woodland fairies and sleeps through most of the rest of the movie
- Peter Pan and Mary
Poppins —both mothers are incapable of correcting the
bullying behavior of the father, leaving the children feeling
emotionally void and searching for an altered existence in a
fantasy world
- Monsters Inc. —poor Boo is trapped in Monsteropolis for what seems like days without her mother apparently noticing
- The Little Mermaid —mother is presumably dead at the start of the movie, but maybe mermaids don’t need two sexes to reproduce
Oh sure, there are some exceptions mostly taking place in the animal kingdom. The Lion King got to keep his mom, but his dad suffered death by trampling. 101 Dalmations got two high functioning parents but the tradeoff was a crazy,serial killing, chain smoker who captured them and tried to skin them like Buffalo Bill from Silence of the Lambs.
OK, OK, I also know that Disney merely adapted many of these stories and he isn’t entirely to blame for the lack of motherly presence. Still, I find it ironic that I have worked hard to plan this vacation over M-O-T-H-E-R-S Day weekend (and the subsequent week).
So, I ask you…what should I be more afraid of next week? The sugar highs or disappearing into the Disneyland Mother Abyss?
