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Jose Rosales

THE statement

Had this column been due a few weeks before, you would’ve gotten 500 

words of scathing analysis about the state of higher education and its effects 
on students, as well as an introspective anecdote about family, obligations and 
dreams.

(Heavy, I know, but what can I say? It was finals week and I was under a lot 

of stress.)

But that was all before my dad decided to book a family vacation to Cancun.
The events that transpired during the Madhani family’s weeklong stay in 

southeastern Mexico reminded me why, as a rule, we avoid taking extended 
family vacations too often. It’s worth noting that this was our first weeklong 
international trip together since India in 2011.

If you’re like me and at least barely passed math, you’ll realize that 2011 was 

four years ago, back when sequined Uggs were considered formal winter foot-
wear.

So, without further ado, I welcome you to what I’d like to call, “A Very Blun-

der-ful Madhani Christmas.”

Most people take long breaks in tropical environments for one reason — 

relaxation. However, the first thing you should know about my family is that 
we, collectively, understand that no one at all — save my seven-year-old sister 
— will be calm, cool and collected at any point during said trip.

My father, the breadwinner, funds and plans the entirety of all our vaca-

tions, so any dollar (or various other international currencies) being spent by 
us is bound to send him miniature panic attacks. My mother, with her neurotic 
— and I say this affectionately — nature, has an obsessive need to coordinate 
every outfit with a different pair of shoes/jewelry and make sure that everyone 
is having fun with a capital F.

My brother, the definition of a Type B personality, aggravates my parents 

with his idleness and lack of overt enthusiasm that their aggravation, in turn, 
stresses him out. And I, with my incessant need to be left alone and do every-
thing by myself, find the idea of a family vacation an obstacle to my leisure.

The collision of these four very complex personalities always results in 

an inevitable crash and burn, but our trip to Cancun was a disaster from the 
beginning.

Tragedy struck at baggage claim — we realized that our single checked bag 

was nowhere to be found. The night before our flight, my mother had care-
fully folded each of her outfits, selected her jewelry and shoes accordingly, and 
packed her new perfumes in the MIA bag.

After being told by Delta personnel that the bag had, in fact, arrived at the 

Cancun airport, my family and I inspected each of the bags in every aisle 
before coming to the conclusion that someone else had picked it up from the 
airport and accidentally taken it home. My mother looked like she was about 
to burst into tears. I think she might have preferred a “Home Alone” scenario 
with any of her children over losing her brand new dress from J. Crew.

But she comforted herself with the fact that we would soon be headed to 

settle into our home for the week, what we thought would be a three-bedroom 
house (key word here being “thought”). Something must have gotten lost in 
translation, because the house was, in fact, an apartment with one bedroom 
that had three glorified couches, a bathroom with no door and — the mother 
loads — no air conditioning for 90 degree south-of-the-border weather.

My father is livid at this point — remember, he pays for all of this stuff and 

once wrote a Starbucks customer complaint so stern that he received several 
free drink vouchers. He attempts to contact as many hotels as possible to find 
us other accommodations, but to no avail. We decide to crash there for the 
night, spend the next day exploring Chichen-Itza and then deliberate what our 
next move should be.

One of the few things I’ve retained from one of my intro-level classes is that 

every good story has a fairy godmother who rescues the princess from her des-
titute conditions. Although we were far from destitute, really, just extremely 
uncomfortable in our small quarters, our angel came in the form of Hernando, 
the sales representative for Palace Resorts and Spas.

After a chance encounter at his booth at Chichen-Itza, where he really took a 

liking to us, and a pizza dinner, Hernando convinced my family and I to visit a 
decadent resort called Moon Palace.

Another thing you need to know about my family is that we are what my 

roommates Sharon and Tanvi would call a “scheme squad.” We will do literally 
anything to score free stuff, including sitting through a 90-minute presenta-
tion about timeshares we weren’t going to buy at a hotel we wouldn’t think of 
living at just for a free breakfast and 30 percent discount on theme park tick-
ets.

When the 90-minute presentation turned out to take almost five hours to 

get through, our planned beach day was effectively ruined. But, in the end, we 
emerged relatively unscathed when my dad struck a deal with the Moon Palace 
sales rep that allowed us to stay in one of their satellite hotels for the rest of our 
vacation.

It was a torn-dress-to-glass-slippers moment, truly, but it wouldn’t last long. 

While this was the most miraculous thing to happen to us in Cancun, the vaca-
tion was determined to continue downhill. As I’m nearing 1,000 words in this 
column, I realize there’s no way I can do justice to what more there is to come.

My father forgetting the tickets to the theme parks in the hotel and having 

to drive back in heavy rain, resulting in a fender bender, along with a black cat 
crossing our path on the way back to the hotel; my mother’s new starch-white 
handbag receiving its own seat on the flight back and possibly spotting one of 
my good friends’ dad at Moon Palace — these are some of the stories I still have 
left to tell.

I’m not saying we need our own National Lampoon movie, but we probably 

need our own National Lampoon movie.

ILLUSTRATIONS BY EMILIE FARRUGIA

Wednesday, January 6, 2016 // The Statement 

B Y TA N YA M A D H A N I

My Cultural Currency: A very blunderful Christmas

