A Perfectionist Dad's Guide to Family Travel
The Master Planner
In my professional life, I am a system builder. I manage a pharmacy, run a consulting firm, and optimize workflows down to the second. I am obsessed with efficiency, structure, and control.
Naturally, when it comes to planning family vacations, I bring that same intensity. I am the quintessential travel planner. Last autumn, when I took my wife and two daughters to Japan—navigating the bustling streets of Osaka and Tokyo—I mapped out everything. From our accommodations to our daily transit routes, every detail was locked into a spreadsheet. I did the exact same thing this spring for our trip to Seoul and Jeju in South Korea.
I take immense pride in gifting my family a seamless, perfectly orchestrated experience. But here is the paradox of being a perfectionist dad: the true magic of family travel only happens when you let the plan fall apart.
Dropping the Persona
When you spend 350 days a year being the stoic manager, the problem-solver, and the disciplined operator, it becomes hard to turn that persona off. You view a missed train or a delayed flight not as an adventure, but as a system failure.
But my family—my wife and my two daughters—are my ultimate sanctuary. They are the only people in the world around whom I can drop all logic, shed the armored exterior, and experience raw, unfiltered joy.
During our trips, there are moments when the itinerary doesn't matter. Sitting in a small ramen shop in Osaka, laughing at an inside joke, or feeling the ocean breeze in Jeju—these are the moments where I force myself to detach from the schedule. I have to remind myself that my daughters won't remember how perfectly I coordinated the subway transfers; they will remember how hard their dad laughed with them.
The Beauty of Unfiltered Joy
Being a father is about balancing the dual responsibilities of providing security and providing warmth.
The meticulous planning provides the security. It ensures we sleep in safe places, eat good food, and don't waste time wandering aimlessly. But the warmth? That comes from letting go. It comes from stepping out of the "manager" role and simply being present.
To all the perfectionist fathers out there: plan the trip meticulously. Build the spreadsheets. But the moment you board that plane, give yourself permission to be imperfect. Give yourself permission to just be a dad.
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