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Sara's avatar

We live in Massachusetts but my 10 y.o. and I went to Vermont where we met up with my cousin and her family, who rented a house up there. They live in Wyoming and were in the path of totality for the last one, and she insisted it was a "life-changing experience" and wanted to come out here for this one. She was completely right! We looked at a map and found a small town about an hour from where we were staying to try to ensure less cloud cover and two more minutes of totality, and on the drive out there we saw so many people barbecuing in their yards, setting up camp chairs, kids setting up lemonade stands, and just general excitement. We set up a blanket and chairs in a totally empty soccer field and it just soaked up the cosmic-ness of it all. If you've read The Phantom Tollbooth, it made me think about the chapter where Milo decides to conduct the sunrise and everything goes sideways.

10 y.o. was totally in awe and couldn't stop talking about how cool it was.

On the parenting front, it was also great because I also have 6 y.o. twins who are wonderful but just take up a lot of emotional/physical/aural space (they stayed home with dad) and it was nice to do something with just him. He also loooooved being with my cousin's teens and do "big kid" stuff. The traffic was bad just trying to get back to our rental house so I scrapped our original plan to drive home that night (which was good, because I had co-workers that said it took them 13 hours to do what would normally be a 3.5 hour drive!!) and got up at 5am the next day instead and THAT - just me with one sleeping kid in the car, watching the sunrise over the mountains, listening to music - was also amazing. I'm still on a high from the whole thing and being part of such a huge collective experience.

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Kate W's avatar

We were in the path of totality in Vermont. It lives up to the cliches of being a life changing thing to see. It was crazy to feel it start to get gradually colder, the light take on a weird vibe like a bad Instagram filter, and then become dusk instantaneously. We also stayed up north so luckily we didn't hit too bad of traffic on the way back to our hotel. It was gridlock to get out of the town, but once we hit the highway, it was pretty smooth sailing. Had we been trying to go back home though, we would have sat in some brutal traffic.

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