To see the happiness on their faces that only a travel experience can bring is priceless.
One of the greatest joys is to be able to accompany elderly parents with limited mobility to touristy places.
To board flights and ferries with them...
To see museums and parks...
To sit at beaches and drive around new places...
To marvel at historical sites...
To eat at local restaurants...
To see the happiness on their faces that only a travel experience can bring is priceless.
It is not unusual that some of our best memories as families are drawn from journeys we have taken to unknown places.
Long train rides, jumping into buses, steamers, taxis that took us to cities and towns that leapt out of the atlas and came alive from being just spots on the map.
The holidays would be planned by our parents during school holidays.
Suitcases would be packed, aloo sabzi and poori would be packed along with water bottles and a small glass -- travel was like a mini adventure.
Our parents would take turns carrying us around when our legs ached, or made us sleep on their laps on a bus seat.
They would rush to buy a comic book from the A H Wheeler at the train platform and made us sit by the prized window seat.
Now, the tables have turned.
We plan the holidays for our parents around the number of days we can take off from work.
We push them gently, slowly in a wheelchair.
We look for ramps and places that are kind to the elderly.
The pace of travel is much slower, the destinations need a careful think-through -- it takes some planning, but is not difficult to accomplish.
In doing so, we do a fraction of what they did for us, but they make such a big deal of it like only parents can do.
As parents age, walking some measure of a distance poses the biggest challenge.
My parents who walked from sunrise to sunset during their travels are no longer able to do so, but the love for travel still burns bright.
'Travel (noun), the only thing you buy that makes you richer' -- reads a plaque that sits on a mantle in our family home.
Old age does not mean you just stay at home believes my father whose spirit for travel far exceeds the strength in his lungs.
'Travel as much as you can, as long as you can. Spend money on travel, not on shopping,' is his advice.
Armed with that rocking thought, we have travelled with my parents who are in their 80s to several places -- and added to the family box of memories.
Here are some points that I have accumulated from such travels that may be useful for others in similar situations.
Paid wheelchairs are available at bigger airports, but are expensive. Airlines do not charge for wheelchairs.
Travel is, after all, about memories.
Photographs curated by Rajesh Karkera, Anant Salvi/Rediff
Feature Presentation: Aslam Hunani/Rediff