Holiday poopers?
Business Standard

Arati Menon Carroll / Mumbai February 4, 2006


A recent trip to Goa left me with a plaguing reflection: 
When it comes to the conduct of kids on holiday, what is kosher and what
is not? 

Let me present the incriminating circumstances. So I am striking a
languid pose by the pool of my hotel (more on that later) in sunny Goa,
sipping at my "special", contemplating a plunge, when I spot a rather
aggressive child having a go at another, and then another, with a blunt
instrument of some sort, for what seemed like an extended period of
time. 

When the father of a bawling girl brought the injustice to attention of
the aggressor's mother, her reaction was: "Things like this happen on
holiday, teach your child to hit back". I choked on my straw. 

Now the sight of naked children cavorting in and around a pool has
always unnerved me. It's like wearing white at Wimbledon, there is no
exception to pool- appropriate attire, even if you're a child. One day
(on the same holiday) an unclothed child and his parents made their way
to the water. 

Minutes later, the child had climbed out, was standing on the edge and
aiming an interminable spray onto his mother and the pool. His father
unhurriedly nudged him towards the nearest bush, but too late to stop
severe damage to the allure of the pool. The mother maintained her
sangfroid. 

Suffice it to say my holiday was just not the same anymore. It must also
be mentioned (although I understand that this is almost definitely an
exception) that the only people who seemed to react negatively to this
display of smuttiness were people unaccompanied by toddlers. 

The others continued their laps around the sullied pool.  This
take-it-easy parenting style is great for parents who don't want the
stress that accompanies rule-breaking when on holiday, and unleashing
kids on holiday can be great for building their self-assurance and the
process of discovery, but how literally does one take "chill-out in Goa"
when it comes to one's children? Is the solution child-free zones like
in some parts of Lanzarote? Or to just have kids of your own and develop
empathy? 

In fact, is holiday decorum on a general decline along with service in
Goa? My "mini-boutique" hotel took an hour and a half to oblige meal
orders, never served water with it, was depleted of an electricity and
water source every few hours and didn't censure the family whose French
bulldog followed its owners into the pool (all in all, the pool was just
not a good place to be) Am I wrong to protest poor service in a land
where sosegad (easy going bordering on lazy) is a way of life?  Is it
discourteous to ask for courtesy in Goa? 

Before you send me letters of commiseration, there were highpoints to
the vacation... of the culinary kind.  There are some of us who flock to
Goa to follow the freshest gourmet trails over (what one veteran Goa
tripper sordidly calls "the hippie, hepatitis and acid trail"). 

My recommendation for the season is La Terrasse in little Baga that
dishes up a Marseilles seaport fare.  The refined black and white
aesthetic is a refreshing change from the standard kitsch. And partners
Eric and Thierry (one dons a black robe, the other an apposite white)
are impeccable hosts. The music of Jeanne Morreau and Edith Piaf is just
as elevating as the gradient of the hillock it's on. Nice.

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