SmashArticles.com
Search For
Keywords  
  Advance Search
Smash Articles | Smash Ebooks | Smash Community | Smash Web Directory | Smash SEO Tools

Articles

Submit Your Article
Latest Articles
Popular Articles
Top Rated Articles
RSS Feed for Articles ROR Feed for Articles

Ebooks

Latest Ebooks
Popular Ebooks
Top Rated Ebooks
Authors
Cover Gallery
RSS Feed for Ebooks ROR Feed for Ebooks

Donation


Web Directory

Submit Your Website


Partner

Articles directory

Sign up for Newsletter

Email

 

Add This Article To:
Del.icio.us Digg Google Spurl
Blink Furl Y! MyWeb
Back to Humor

Tempted To Cruise Through Life?


by Knight Pierce Hirst

Cruise is a relaxing word. You imagine deck chairs, ocean breezes - and no responsibilities. The word lets your thoughts drift at sea - unless you're my husband.

John feels confined on ships, he feels confined in the tuxedo he's expected to wear to formal dinners on board and he can't be conned into feeling fine about it.

When in doubt - or you can't get your way - compromise. We compromised by sailing on a small ship - eighty passengers, casual dress and one seating for meals with a set menu.

One advantage of this type of vacation is having to unpack only once. One disadvantage on a small ship is finding a place for everything in a three-drawer locker with three feet of hanging space. There's no decoration in the utilitarian cabin, but an attractive sign saying, "Less is more" would have been appropriate.

The sign, however, wouldn't fit in the bathroom, which contained a toilet, sink and hand shower in a four by five foot space. Thankfully, I never got very dirty - I wouldn't have fit in the bathroom.

Walking seventeen times around the deck was a mile or you could read, which was a euphemism for napping. There was Bingo too. What would a cruise be without Bingo? It would B-2 bad. Although we played for cocktails instead of cash, Bingo was a sobering experience.

Because it was a small ship, there was no shuffleboard, volley ball or exercise machines. Instead, we shuffled cards, volleyed topics of conversation back and forth and exercised our judgment about whether to attend the lectures.

The lectures were about ports we were visiting - their history, their uniqueness and, of course, their shopping. When to have the lectures, however, was a problem for Goldilocks - not in the morning because people wanted to sleep late, not in the afternoon because it could turn happy hour smiles upside down and not after dinner because the snoring would be disruptive. Food for thought was most appetizing before lunch.

I don't know how long it took Pavlov to condition his dogs to salivate when they heard a bell, but passengers are conditioned by day two. On shipboard eating is the most popular activity. At first you try to be good - no pancakes. no breads, no desserts. However, you soon discover your conscience is on vacation too. It's a vacation that lets you put your life on cruise control.

About the Author
Knight Pierce Hirst takes humorous looks at life. Take a minute to make yourself smile at http://knightwatch.typepad.com
Reviews Be the first to review/rate this Article

Home | Articles | Ebooks | Community | Web Directory | SEO Tools | Submit Your Article | Submit Your Website
Latest Articles | Popular Articles | Top Rated Articles | RSS Feed for Articles | ROR Feed for Articles
Latest Ebooks | Popular Ebooks | Top Rated Ebooks | Ebook Authors | Cover Gallery | RSS Feed for Ebooks | ROR Feed for Ebooks
Site Map | FAQ | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Advertise With Us | About SmashArticles.com | Contact Us | links
Partners | Resources
 
Copyright © 2006 SmashArticles.com