Happy Holidays from the Bricker Family to Yours

It’s my favorite weekend of the year, and one we usually spend at Walt Disney World. That won’t be happening this year, but only because our traditional post-Thanksgiving trip was delayed by other travels–we literally just got home yesterday from a Christmas trip to three of our favorite theme parks on earth–but more on that later (and via photos throughout this post).

As I sit here writing this at approximately 3 a.m. in a jetlagged stupor, I feel like a kid on Christmas morning. Not a creature is stirring, except for Yossarian the Cat who really wants attention, and won’t stop meowing and biting my ears. I’m excited because the Detroit Lions managed to pull off a win (or rather, the Bears managed to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory with terrible clock management). I’m excited because it’s Black Friday and there are actually a lot of really good Disney-related deals this year.

I’m also excited to start celebrating Christmas at home. To get out our Twinkly tree and all the other stuff I bought on clearance in February (we really cleaned up at Crate & Barrel when prices dropped to 75% off). To finally start using our excessive collection of Christmas coffee mugs. (Is it weird that over half of our mugs are for a holiday that lasts less than two months? Don’t answer that.) But I can’t do any of that until Sarah and Megatron are up. So now, I jot down thoughts and round up deals.

Quiet mornings like this one, in the shadow of Thanksgiving, are also a great time for reflection. And I wanted to share some of these with you because some of them pertain to you…and because the cat is in more of a talking than listening mood.

Let’s start with one of the big things for which Sarah and I are both thankful, which is the readers and commenters of Disney Tourist Blog. We want to once again reiterate how thankful we are for all of you and try to express our earnestness. This isn’t perfunctory praise or insincere sentiment, like a band shouting “we love [insert city they’re in].” We really and truly mean this, from the bottom of our hearts.

We are so incredibly appreciative of your support. Whether you lurk silently, comment on every single post, or somewhere in between. Your support means the world to us–probably far more than most of you will ever know. Thank you so, so much.

This is doubly true during a year when artificial intelligence has made blogging more challenging. As a writer who never uses AI, it’s been a little concerning to see the proliferation of computer-generated garble. To see that junk food content perform well is disheartening. Likewise, to have Google and other AI platforms take content and pass it off as their own.

So thank you all for supporting the real, human-created content on this website. I’d like to think it’s better than AI-generated fluff, but then again, I’m a biased and subjective human who cannot match the objective reasoning of a robot. I sometimes feel like Dwight as he tries to outsell the computer during the Dunder Mifflin Infinity website launch party. I know the writing here isn’t always perfect, and I’m certainly more verbose than the average computer, but I hope it’s useful, entertaining, and engaging.

As always, we greatly appreciate your readership–and when you share our posts with your friends, family, colleagues, etc. We truly are thankful to have the best and most thoughtful readers. That may seem like a trite platitude, but we really mean it. Spend any amount of time browsing the comments section here versus most other websites and you’ll see the contrast. There’s a reason why the first rule of the internet is never read the comments. 

Thankfully, that has never applied with you all. That has also been doubly true this year, as I’ve done very little moderation. Stuff still gets flagged for whatever reason from time-to-time, but it’s almost always approved. (Side note: I’m thankful most of Disney’s assorted controversies that gave rise to increased moderation seem to be in the rearview mirror.)

As we reflect this weekend on all the ways we’re grateful, we couldn’t pass up the opportunity to stop and share a very sincere and heartfelt thank you. Again. You all deserve a round of applause.

As long as we’re on the topic of thankfulness, I thought I’d share a quick Baby Bricker and family update in the form of other things for which I’m thankful.

First and foremost, I’m thankful for Sarah. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: taking care of a baby isn’t just a full-time job. Those are only 40-some hours per week, whereas this is 24/7. Unfortunately, Megatron doesn’t even give us weekends or holidays off! And actually, this isn’t a job at all–it’s more like volunteer work…that we’re paying to do?!

Sarah is up at all hours. She’s doing it all. She’s making healthy, home-cooked meals for Megatron and me, and no matter how much I might grouse about preferring frozen pizza, I really appreciate the effort she puts into keeping us healthy. (For anyone who’s ever asked how we’re fit despite eating so much Disney food, that’s the answer.)

I continue to be in absolute awe of Sarah and somehow love her even than ever. She’s so good at everything she does, but watching her be a mom–something she wanted for so long–has been truly magical. She’s definitely the Megatron of Mothers (or Barry Sanders, if you’d prefer). The best to ever do it.

On a more lighthearted Megatron-related note, I’m thankful for Disney’s exceptional lost and found.

I’ve mentioned before that Megatron hates wearing socks, to which many of you responded recommending Sock Ons. Well perhaps those do work if you’re not raising Houdini Junior. But Megatron is very persistent, watches what we do, and adapts to reverse-engineer and undo what’s been done. You know how velociraptors learn to open doors? That’s Megatron with anything…including the door to her “baby-proof” gates.

So we should’ve known better when reading reviews before buying baby shoes, believing that they’d be “impossible” to remove, and only buying one pair before a trip. Those puppies were constantly being thrown on the ground, and while most of the time we caught them being jettisoned, we did have to make three separate trips to lost and found. And against all odds, returned home with that one pair of shoes! There were some shoeless and sockless hours in between, though.

Oh yeah, Megatron’s major milestone is that she’s walking now!

What a game-changer this has been already. She had been cruising for a few months and would do laps of our living room with me each night before dinner with her little baby walker. That meant she was still putting her weight on something else, but she had been getting more surefooted. She was also able to stand for longer and move faster.

Then cruising with the walker transitioned to walking with me holding both of her hands. In the blink of an eye, we were walking down Main Street with her, and got the sense that she wanted to walk on her own. (A sense we got because she made clear to us that she wanted to stand on her own. And with that, I got my first bittersweet taste of how it feels as kids start to outgrow their parents.) As fitting and picture-perfect as that would’ve been, there wasn’t really the space for it, nor did we feel it’d be safe between the crowds and hard ground…so we kept holding her hands.

A few days later, Megatron took her first unassisted steps in an empty dining room one afternoon at Casbah Food Court. I can only assume she was inspired by an excellent adventure on Sindbad’s Storybook Voyage!

Far less picturesque of a setting, but we can’t plan where and when life’s special moments will happen. It would’ve been magical no matter where it happened, even at the DMV. Those first steps are indelibly etched into my memory. What a moment.

So many of these major developmental milestones have happened in the blink of an eye. I still remember the day that she finally rolled over, and how overjoyed we were when it happened.

It seemed like that one took a while, but everything since–sitting upright on her own, crawling, standing, walking–has happened way too fast. How did our little baby go from having trouble rolling to now wanting to walk independently in so little time?!

We’re also thankful that Yossarian the Cat has come into his own as a great big brother. He actually started out as being scared of Megatron, which was probably because she was loud, wiggly, and foreign to him.

The last time we brought home a loud, wiggly, little critter, it turned out to be his younger brother, Walter E. Dogsney, our miniature dachshund. Yossarian probably still wishes we kept the receipt and returned the dog.

Eventually, Yossarian became indifferent towards the dog. Occasionally, they’ll cuddle or the cat will do a “drive by” licking of the dog, but Walter definitely loves Yossarian more than the other way around. We expected the cat to have similar sentiment towards the baby. Boy were we wrong.

Yossarian loves Megatron.

I can’t quite pinpoint why or even how this attitude adjustment happened. I do remember one night after we put the baby to bed only to come back to her crying, and the cat curled up right outside of her crib, totally unbothered.

They’ve gotten even closer since, to the point that Yossarian comes to Megatron when she’s upset and purrs in her face. He’ll walk in circles around her, sit next to us, and rub his nose on her. It’s like he knows exactly what to do to calm her down, make her smile and laugh. (Nothing is funnier than a cat!)

Yossarian has always been affectionate with me; he’s definitely “my” cat and 90% of this blog’s posts (including this one) have been written with him on my lap. He usually avoids almost everyone else, except Sarah’s mom and sometimes Sarah (not always–she’s to blame for the dog acquisition, and Yossarian holds grudges for decades).

Still, we never expected Yossarian to be so loving towards a baby. Especially given that he’s 17 years old and slightly stuck in his ways, and she’s slightly, uh, exuberant. But love her he does, and he’s been a huge asset to us in helping with Megatron.

Much less surprising is that Megatron loves Yossarian.

She gets excited whenever she sees him, and few things instantly cheer her up like Yossarian the Cat. The chance to pet him has averted many a meltdown, and induced 180-degree attitude improvements.

She loves him so much that “cat-cat” was one of her first words (oddly enough, she hasn’t quite mastered “Yossarian” yet). When we go places, looking for stray cats is a favorite activity that likewise brings instant excitement. Same goes for squirrels or other small furry creatures.

Amusingly, many of Megatron’s favorite Disney attractions are those that contain critters that could plausibly be cats. I’m debating a list of her favorite rides (like Sarah & Tom Bricker’s Top 15 Disney Attractions, but much less detailed)–partly for fun, partly for our own sake so we can look back on it–and about half of the entries would be rides that contain cat-like animals.

It’s interesting to discover which animals are and are not cats to her. Mickey is not, which is fitting given the cat-mouse dynamic. She also sees him a lot, both in person and via plushies. So she recognizes Mickey and Minnie independently, as their own species or whatever. Pooh also is not a cat for the same reasons. Beast and bears (of the non-Pooh variety), on the other hand, are cats. So she also loves them.

We recently took a 16-hour flight, which is a long time for anyone, but especially a baby. We don’t normally let her have any screen time, but decided it was better than the alternative about halfway through the flight when things were going a bit off the rails.

Wanting something that wouldn’t be overly-stimulating, I saw “A Horse’s Tale” on the in-flight relaxation video screen. That instantly did the trick, as Megatron waved and cheered at the “cat-cats.” I’ve now watched that one video three-dozen times, which is not an exaggeration (it’s 21 minutes long and I’ve watched it for approximately 12 hours).

Most importantly, we’re thankful to have a baby who is happy and healthy.

One of the things many readers said in response to our past baby posts is how they loved each new stage more than the last. That the childhood experience just kept getting better and better. Wow do we feel that!

I honestly don’t know how it can get any better than it is right now. If I could freeze this moment in time, at the almost 14-month mark, I would. Well, not actually because I’ve seen enough Twilight Zone episodes to know that’s a fraught idea–and because I can’t wait to see what happens next.

Megatron is at a point right now where she’s incredibly inquisitive, able to learn and retain new concepts, and wants to explore everything. Her personality is coming out, and she’s both funny and smart. (I know every parent probably thinks this about their babies, but I swear it’s true!)

And at least from my perspective, this is making her more fun and less of a challenge. Sure, she has more and more opinions that are somehow both strongly-held and fleeting. That can be interesting to navigate. But we can also see who she is as a person take shape, and there is something really special about that.

Cheesy as it might sound, I’m also thankful for the Disney Parks.

I find myself very conflicted because, on the one hand, I take issue with a lot of Disney’s recent decisions. Not just the recently-announced closures or the poor execution of some big-budget projects (although those things too). But also, the last few years of cutbacks, price increases, nickel & diming, and so forth.

On the other hand, I’m realizing more and more that…they’ve got me. Hook, line and sinker. 

As Sarah and Megatron walked hand-in-hand through the castle, my eyes welled up. My heart overflowed with emotion when my daughter took her first steps in a food court. It was equally emotional, albeit in a very different way, when she got scared of a mischievous monkey (a not-so-fond memory in the moment, but one that’ll age amusingly).

I’ll never forget when she locked eyes with Mickey Mouse on a parade float way off in the distance and vigorously waved back at him, clearly thrilled that a celebrity saw her in that sea of people. Every time she sees a character and her eyes light up all of my assorted grievances melt away, and that moment is literally all that matters.

One of the things Sarah and I like to do is sit in bed after Megatron falls asleep and watch the little ‘moments’ slideshows our phones create of her. While a lot are the small but meaningful ones at home (with her BFF, the cat), a lot are from the Disney Parks.

We’re so fortunate and thankful that we have two parks in our backyard and are able to travel to the others. Even if we couldn’t visit regularly, we would (and do) have full slideshows of incredible memories from single days in the parks.

Now I get why some of the parents who complain most about Disney’s decisions continue to go. It’s these countless little moments and experiences that are etched into your memories. They’ve got you too, don’t they? Who are we even kidding with the complaints…

Finally, we’re thankful for our families. That they’ve been so helpful and supportive and genuinely excited for us and Megatron. The grandparents have come out to visit multiple times and, thankfully, help out a bit. We are second fiddle to her now, but that’s okay, because she is more adorable than us.

Above all else, we’re thankful to be so loved, to have a healthy and happy family, and to get to spend this holiday season together. We’re also looking forward to our first Christmas vacation to Walt Disney World as a family of three, as we continue to make up for lost time after not traveling together at all last year while Sarah was pregnant.

For now, though, it’s time to get back to enjoying my favorite weekend of the year, having a belated Thanksgiving feast, putting up those Christmas decorations, and watching some of our favorite holiday specials on Disney+ and Hallmark! We hope you had a nice Thanksgiving with family and friends, enjoy the rest of the long weekend, and have a happy holiday season!

Need Disney trip planning tips and comprehensive advice? Make sure to read Disney Parks Vacation Planning Guides, where you can find comprehensive guides to Walt Disney World, Disneyland, and beyond! For Disney updates, discount information, free downloads of our eBooks and wallpapers, and much more, sign up for our FREE email newsletter!

YOUR THOUGHTS

Any thoughts you have in response to our latest update on Baby Bricker? Does Disney “have you” hook, line and sinker, too? Any other parental wisdom or recommendations to share? Alternative ways to keep those socks and shoes on baby’s feet??? Anything else you’re interested in reading about with regard to Megatron, babies in the parks, etc? Agree or disagree with our takes here? Hearing your feedback is always appreciated, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

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80 Comments

  1. Beautiful post and photos! Thank you for sharing Megatron’s milestones with us. I heard a saying that went something like “as your parent I am constantly torn between missing the baby you used to be and being so excited to see the person you are growing into”. Disney absolutely has our family too. Those magical moments and memories created and shared at the parks are priceless. It’s been incredible to share that with our son as he grows.

    Happy Holidays, Bricker Family!

    PS we also have a large number of Christmas mugs that we use all year long. There’s absolutely nothing wrong with that.

  2. Merry Christmas and happy holidays to you and your family. Thank you for the great articles, research, and pictures. Thank you for tolerating my comments and even replying with your perspective. Baby Megatron is precious and I wish you all the very best!

  3. Happy Thanksgiving and Merry Christmas to the Bricker family. Thank you for all the beautiful photos. Our “baby” is 54 so those memories are way back, lol.

    You have given our family wonderful advice to plan our trips to WDW. We shared your blog with our children and now share it with grandchildren. We have trips planed with different grandchildren in both February and March so I’ll be reading again.

  4. Best wishes for a great holiday season and 2025 to you and your family. Thank you for posting such awful info with substance along with my favorite pop culture references (i.e. The Office, Arrested Development) for amusement

    Since your family is CA based like ours, we found that letting our little guy walk his heart out under the Silly Symphony Swings and the backside of Grizzly River Run were nice. both were shaded areas with hardly any foot traffic. If you have not already, you will learn some spaces that are safer and quiet for your daughter to get the zoomies out!

  5. Happy Holidays to the Bricker Family! I have been following your blog for quite some time and because of Disney “friends” like you that keep me connected even when I am not there physically-, I am hooked! We will be at WDW at the end of January for a few days and will try to use your Disney wisdom-enjoy the rest of the weekend!

  6. Yes as much as my husband and I complain about awful decisions made in recent years, we’re hooked. Our daughter’s first trip with us in 1986 at 3 years old pics of her with Dreamfinder up to the many trips taken as she went through the CP to advanced internships after achieving her marketing degree. Going with her new husband and now our granddaughter utilizing that magical DVC membership purchased so many years ago that has enabled us to do so. We remember so many magical moments and try to create more together. #noregrets

  7. Happy Holidays Brickers! It’s been a joy to hear the updates of your family and to see all of the joy you share together! I am thankful for you, as your blog was the first one that I started to follow many years ago and got me hooked on Disney planning/research/strategy and helped rediscover my love for Disney World and all of the nostalgia from my childhood (not sure if my wallet is thanking you though lol). And now we have three young kids that we enjoy the parks with and hopefully create some of those special memories that they will take with them the rest of their life too! Like you said it’s an incredible thing getting to experience the parks through the eyes of a child and just to see the joy and amazement in their faces is such a blessing. Happy Holidays!

  8. I’ve been lurking here for probably over 10 years now (possibly commented once or twice). I really appreciate your writing and insight. Thanks for sharing parts of your and Sarah’s Disney life — I can’t imagine the potential scrutiny that comes along with being a semi-public person on the internet.

  9. And I’m thankful for you! I am not planning a Disney trip in the near future, but I read your blog nearly daily to stay in the know about the parks. And I really appreciate that your blog is not AI-generated nonsense garbage. Your assessments are fair, and your style is engaging. I would never advocate for a chat-generated blog, but (and I say this as a writing teacher) you might want to try ProWritingAid, which I recommend for my students. It doesn’t do the writing, but it will identify places where, say, antecedents are unclear or modal verbs might be missing. Thanks for being a voice of sanity!

  10. Happy holidays Bricker family! As mostly just a reader (and very seldom commenter), I have to say I love your blog and your ramblings and hearing about your little family! My son is 10 and this post brought tears to my eyes, it goes so fast. Also my husband lovingly eye rolls me every time I say “well according to Tom…” haha you have achieved household name status as our favorite Disney expert 🙂

    1. Laura, I agree with you 100%! I’m a bit of a lurker too, but I read every post as if I’m planning a trip in one month. Actually I am planning a trip for March, my first one that’s husband-only since 1989. Tom, your hints on zigging when they zag and the LL strategies are the cornerstones of my plans. We can’t do the death march style WDW vacation anymore (curse you, bad knees!), so we have to work smarter. The very best of holidays to you and your family, Tom, and to you and yours, Laura!

  11. Happy Holidays to you, Sarah, and Megatron, Tom! I found your blog this year when we started planning a Disney World trip for early 2025 because we now have two princess-loving little girls, aged 4 years and 20 months. I can’t help you with the socks and shoes problem – my 20 months old won’t keep them in either, and we live in a cold climate. But (if you haven’t discovered them already) we can highly recommend Little Adventures Twirl Dresses for princess dresses that hold up to many many washings and hours on the playground. My husband and I went to Disney World and Disneyland a couple times each in the early days of dating and marriage in the 2010s, but now Disney has us again because of the kids. And we will be spending a lot of time at character meals and waiting to meet princesses and other characters, neither of which I have done before.
    I want to say thank you for this blog. It’s funny and informative and not full of the clickbait filler junk that permeates so many Disney blogs. I would love to see more content in how your touring strategy changes now that you will need to work around Rider Swap and Nap Time (if you haven’t hit the nap stage yet, I warn you that you miss it or interrupt it at your peril). I have yet to find useful early entry/rope drop strategy that considers Rider Swap, so we will be winging it on how to get my husband and I on Rise, FOP, and Guardians, which we haven’t ridden yet (Tron doesn’t appeal as much), and how to rider swap SDMT with our older daughter. We were park open to close for a week straight people without kids, so this trip is going to be an adventure as we discover our limits now. So if you can persuade Sarah to spend your family park time testing it, I’d love some early entry trip reports with a toddler, please! And please include both characters and rides, especially now that LLs for characters seem to be a thing of the past.
    Congratulations again on your beautiful family and so glad you are all doing well! Looking forward to hearing about your next adventures with Megatron. Happy Holidays!

  12. Thank you so much for sharing the pictures! I so look forward to seeing Megatron in them now after following you and Sarah for years, it just warms my heart to overflowing to see the 3 of you sharing time and making Disney memories.
    Happy Holidays to the Bricker family!

  13. Walt Disney World does have me hook, line, & sinker! During the past year or so, I’ve cancelled my passes to SeaWorld & Universal. I’m growing older & they mostly cater to a young, thrill seeking demographic & I can’t handle a lot of those rides anymore, at least not without disobeying the safety rules. SeaWorld either has kiddie rides in Sesame Street Land, or high intensity roller coasters. The only tame grown up rides have an extra charge to get on them. The last straw was when they replaced their “general audiences” dark ride (Antarctica: Empire of the Penguin) with yet another roller coaster (Penguin Trek). I’ll never forgive them for that. I can go on more rides at Universal but they don’t have enough mild rides. Disney truly caters for people of all ages. One day earlier this year I went to Universal Studios & ended up just doing a streetmosphere show & a food booth, because I had a touch of vertigo recently & also sciatica & didn’t dare go on the rides. It was a very lackluster visit to a theme park. I could do the same thing at Epcot, my favorite place on Earth besides my room, & still feel it a satisfying day.

    In recent years, activist groups have pressured me to boycott Disney for political/religious reasons, but I don’t feel I can make that leap yet. I feel iffy about boycotts as a means of social pressure anyway. But I’ve done my part and obtained both Chapek’s & Iger’s company e-mail addresses and have written to them with my concerns several times (for all the good it does!).

    Sweet to hear you talk about your family, especially baby Megatron. I’ve never wanted a child of my own, but I’m glad there are people who do & who treasure the responsibility they’ve been given, so that the human race will go on & there will be enough younger people to take care of us aging folks.

  14. Thank you for the wonderful post and for sharing how Megatron, you and Sarah are doing. I’ve been reading your blog for years and you’re the first person I look to for information about Disneyland. You always have great ideas and input and I appreciate it so much. Those baby years really do go so quickly. I love seeing the photos of Megatron standing up and walking. It’s such an exciting time. I hope the three of you have a magical Christmas and that Megatron continues to have so much fun with her cat-cat!

  15. Tom I love your blog so, so much! I also look forward to your newsletters and read almost everything even though it doesn’t pertain to me. The stories about your family are so precious. Happy Thanksgiving and enjoy your holiday trip to WDW where I’m sure you will create many more wonderful memories!

  16. Thank you, Tom, Sarah and little Megatron for all your wonderful advice. Your posts have brought me joy for over 8 years now and made two very special trips for our family so much better. I’ve been happy to share your articles and advice with others to help them out and give them a smile. I share your concerns about AI and will continue to share your original and fantastic advice as long as it is around for me to share.

  17. You are my number 1Disney resource. Sorry to hear your IP is being vacuumed up by Google without any compensation to your hard work. That has to end as a business model.

    Have a great holiday. Glad to hear your family is doing so well.

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