| The idea for Destination Sitters began with my own experience as a single parent traveling with my children. Like many parents, I loved creating special memories with my family, but I also needed an occasional break, a quiet dinner, a few peaceful hours to recharge, or simply a little time to myself. At the time, the only childcare option available was a kids’ club operating from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., which did not offer the flexibility or personal care I was looking for.
That experience made me realize that traveling parents needed a better solution. I started Destination Sitters to give families access to trusted, carefully screened babysitters who could care for their children directly at their hotel, resort, vacation rental, or event venue or even be mother’s helpers inside the amusement park. My goal was to give parents peace of mind and flexibility to truly enjoy their time away, knowing their children were safe, happy, and well cared for.
Family vacations are supposed to feel refreshing. Time away. New scenery. Shared memories. Yet many parents and grandparents traveling with grandchildren return home feeling more exhausted than before they left. Not because the trip wasn’t good, but because it required constant attention, decision-making, and caregiving without a real pause.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone and you’re not doing it wrong.
Why Family Travel Is So Draining (Even When It’s Wonderful)
Family travel places unique demands on adults, regardless of family structure.
For two-parent families:
- One parent often becomes the “planner” while the other becomes the “enforcer”
- True rest rarely happens at the same time for both adults
- One Prent goes on excursions, but other can’t because someone has to watch the kids.
- Evenings feel like cleanup and logistics, not relaxation
For single parents:
- There is no tag-team option
Every decision, meal, bedtime, and transition falls on one person
- Travel can feel isolating instead of rejuvenating
- No breaks; all the responsibility is yours and no home routines to help.
For grandparents:
- Keeping up with children’s energy levels can be physically demanding
- You want to enjoy time together — not feel worn down by it
- You may hesitate to ask for help while traveling
No matter the family dynamic, the result is often the same:
too much responsibility without enough recovery.
The Real Problem: Vacations Are Planned Around Activities, Not Energy
Most families plan trips by asking:
- What do we want to see?
- What attractions should we book?
- How much can we fit into each day?
But families who return home feeling refreshed plan differently. They also ask:
- When will we rest?
- Who gets a break and when?
- How do we handle evenings?
- What happens if someone gets overtired?
When energy isn’t planned for, exhaustion is almost guaranteed.
The Missing Piece: Planning for Recovery, Not Just Activities
Families who return from trips feeling happy and rested plan differently. They don’t aim to do more; they plan to recover while traveling.
That looks like:
- One anchor activity per day
- Built-in rest windows
- Earlier nights some evenings
- Giving kids calm, familiar routines
- Allowing parents real adult time
When parents get even a small break, the entire trip feels lighter. |