Before Travel

Why Traveling With Young Kids Is Important

Starting this blog has been eye opening for me. It has created this sense of community with fellow travelers who see the merit in exploring and exposing their children to the world. Traveling with my family is one of the highlights of my life. We learn, grow and I feel like my eyes are opened to a different paradigm with each destination. I also don’t think that these learning experiences should just be reserved for adults or older children. As a millennial mom, I am sharing why traveling with young kids is important to me and our family.

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Little man has been obsessed with water since day one!

Why Traveling With Young Kids Is Important to Me

Something that I wasn’t prepared to experience when starting this blog is seeing how many people want to travel but feel unqualified to do so. Many parents seem nervous, unaware, and unsure about traveling with their children and spending money when younger children most likely will not remember the particulars of the trip.

I know that every parent has different opinions and thoughts about raising their children and I love and respect that. To me, the difference in perspectives is what makes the world so interesting. I am not here to mock or criticize a certain way of parenting (Heaven knows I am NO expert) but simply want to share why it is so important for me to show my toddler the world. The exact science behind it all is covered a little bit later. In my opinion, even though children can’t remember the details of a trip or an experience -what they see and do, does affect the person they become and how they will view the world.

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One of my favorite things about traveling with Beckham is seeing him get to know the locals.

Our Experiences Traveling With A Young Child

The first vacation Beckham* went on was when he was 17 days old (Yes 17  DAYS – what was I thinking?) We decided to go to Jackson Hole and spend some time as a family in the mountains. This meant we were shlepping ALL of the baby stuff, and the newborn, on a 5-hour drive to Jackson Hole. Arguably Beckham is not going to remember one tiny ounce of that trip. But I do. It was so reviving to get away from the stress and be with family and my brand new baby.

*New to our blog? Find out who we are here – About Us page.

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Baby Becks swinging in his swing that we hauled all the way up to Jackson Hole. – so worth it haha.

Our First Long Haul Flight With A Baby

Beck’s first long plane ride was when he was 5 months old and we were going to Hawaii as a fam. People thought we were crazy! A baby on an 8-hour flight, overnight? What? He isn’t going to remember anything! 

Yes, the flight was a challenge, yes we had to take an entire extra suitcase just for his crap, yes he slept on the beach half of the time, yes there were fits on top of fits every sunscreen application, and yes there were some activities we missed out on because we were caring for a baby.

However, he was in Heaven. It was sensory overload – the weather, the animals, the smells, colors, and sounds. It really was fantastic to watch him. I won’t ever forget seeing him mesmerized by the waves and his reaction the first time he sat in the sand (spoiler alert – he hated it at first). He might not have realized how awesome it was that he was in Hawaii, but he knew we were somewhere different and we had a fantastic time as a family away from the ins and outs of the daily life we were navigating – work, school, and being new parents. 

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Becks in Hawaii for the first time with Grandma

Taking Our 1-Year-Old to Europe

 When Beckham was a year old, the entire family went to the United Kingdom for almost three weeks. The boys in the family had been dying to go on a golf trip. Stefen, Beckham and I were not about to stay behind just because it was going to be more of a challenge for us. It was hard; the flights, the time-change, the realities of naps, bottles, the aunt and uncles trying to get him to throw a fit in the National Gallery (they still think it is hysterical to this day, and I so do not haha) and just the overall schedule shift.

family travel, traveling with young children
All he wanted to do was climb on the headstones and pound on them to make noise while we were visiting Saint Andrews haha. He kept trying to crawl away from me after this picture.

Yet, I wouldn’t have changed it for the world. Overall, Beckham was a champ and we honestly had the BEST time.  He, of course, is not going to remember seeing Eyck’s Arnolfini Portrait. Yet, children are making connections as they are forming their own paradigm of how they view the world.

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Little man practicing walking in Westminster Abbey in London. Again, he wanted to just stomp on the headstones. Should I be worried haha??

*If you are wanting more information about family travel and how to help your child have a successful trip, read our article on – 7 Tips to Prepare Your Child for an Upcoming Trip.

The Science Behind It All

I am going to get all sciencey here (yes, I just totally made up the word “sciencey” haha when trying to sound all academic) but babies and young children make 1 MILLION neural connections every second in their first years of life! The science behind children making connections is called brain architecture and Harvard Medical School has an amazing article that breaks it down – Brain Architecture Harvard Medical School.

Essentially young children are born with relatively few connections about the world around them. In the first couple of years of life, they take and process almost everything they see and experience to form neural pathways. The connections and pathways formed at the early stages of life become part of long term memory. That is why experts say read to your baby, snuggle them, and sing to them as young children because this WILL shape them, even if they can’t remember it.  

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Backpack Becks hiking with Stefen in the cloud forest in Costa Rica. He still talks about the snake that he saw while we were there.

So to all of those people who say it is worthless to take young children on trips that they won’t remember, to them I say – I disagree.  The things Beckham sees, feels, and touches, will shape him and the person he will become. Why wouldn’t every parent want their child to have a global education?

His experiences will help make him who he is.  I want Beckham to be a global citizen, to love different cultures and learning. Traveling together encourages that.

Our Plans This Year

Just this year, we have plans to take Beckham to seven different countries. This is a little more than usual, but we have something super exciting in the works that we will share soon! We do not travel full time. We have lives, jobs, a home, neighbors, and daily responsibilities to take care of.  Each trip takes work, time, and money that could be spent elsewhere. But taking him to experience the world is right at the top of my priority list, and I am willing to sacrifice other things so I can create these memories with him.

Why I Love Seeing Him Learn and My Hope For the Future

Becks has already become a travel expert. He can get himself through security, he holds his own passport (haha, we watch him like a HAWK), gets himself on the airplane, into his seat, and honestly, about 90% of the time is a dream on flights. When we went to Bora Bora and flew for two days straight – he was perfect. He LOVES to travel and comes alive when seeing and doing new things. Just on our last trip he was asking Stefen about different skin colors and languages. He was clearly assimilating all of the new things he was experiencing and seeing.

He has swum with sharks, fed monkeys, shared his toys with cute little kids in a small Central American village, seen more works of art than the average American college student and will not remember a thing. And you know what – I am okay with that :). Traveling with my young child has brought us so close! We have so many experiences that we share together. I really do feel like these moments will not only shape him but shape our relationship to come. 

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I would NEVER give up our experiences together traveling as a big family. It is one of my most favorite things!

What do you think about traveling with young kids? Worth it? Not? Share your thoughts below!

*Click to shop our Taking Flight coloring book for kids in preparation for your air travel!

Download our Taking Flight coloring book NOW!

*Don’t forget to subscribe to our newsletter for your FREE #coloringtheworld starter kit to help them build those foundations!

Xoxox

Kam

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9 thoughts on “Why Traveling With Young Kids Is Important

  1. This is a great article . My husband and I took our under 2 year old toddler to San Antonio to Sea World when it opened about 28 years ago, took a river boat ride, hiked at enchanted rock state park, and took the vanishing river cruise on the Colorado River. My daughter just turned 30 and is a real travel bug, in fact she’s a travel agent! Coincidence? Who knows? She doesn’t remember those experiences however I’m a firm believer in the brain research and the tremendous learning opportunities travel affords!

    1. Lisa! This is such a wonderful comment and what a funny coincidence indeed! Your daughter sounds wonderful and you sound like such a fantastic mom. Thank you so much for reading and commenting. We love our readers so much!
      Xoxoxo
      Kam

  2. We have five kids (ages 8 months-14 years) and we take a trip every year…sometimes not so far and other times very far. We always take everyone! I can’t imagine leaving behind part of our family on vacation…it seems crazy to me! On the other hand, we took our family to Japan in 2016 with a then 8 month old and everyone thought we were insane, but we planned and prepared and it was absolutely a great trip!

    1. Hello, Ani! 5 kids – that is amazing! Japan with an 8-month-old is super adventurous but I am sure it was such a blast! A little planning with the little ones can go such a long way :). How did the baby do on the flight?

      It does seem crazy to leave some people behind huh? It is weird, but we have found that it works for us with the older kids and grandbabies. Sometimes something fits in the budget/schedule for one but not for the other. Thank you so much for your awesome comment, we love our readers! Hope to hear more about your travels soon.

      Xoxox
      Kam 🙂

  3. I love this so much. My children are now 10 and 6 but have been traveling since they were both 6 months old. I get questioned all the time, how do you afford to do all the traveling you do? Answer: it’s not what you make, it’s what you spend and we choose to spend our money on adventures. Also, same comments are “but your kids won’t remember”, to us, as you said, it shapes who they are from when they are very little. Plus, I LOVE that we get to experience these adventures with our children. Great blog!

    1. Leah! You are about the sweetest ever! Thank you so much for your comment, I couldn’t agree more with you. It is about how we manage our priorities. Your children sound like they have had a wonderful global education. Thank you again for your lovely comment, we love our readers so much! Xo – Kam 🙂

  4. Great article. High quality, flows easily, and LOVE the science behind it too.

    We are a family of four (children are 5 and 2) and part about how the children make connections with the world around them to form their own viewpoints really hit home. We are already seeing them grow in their own way as they meet people who look different to their usual friends, different languages, dangers, weather, animals…everything.

    We’re at https://www.ourtinycorner.com/ if you’d like to follow our trip, and of course we welcome any feedback you have too!

    All the best for your continued journeys.

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