Hi, Alex and welcome.
Before getting a TV at home, I remember watching a show at my aunt's house.
I think it used to be called "Walt Disney's
Disneyland" before they changed it in 1961 to "Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color". I believe the series originally tied together with the newly constructed Disneyland theme park with programming highlighting certain rides and attractions.
I was hooked. But no one in my family was ever interested. So I was lucky if I was able to watch it. And no one was ever interested in going to Disneyland and later Walt Disney World.
Most of the other only four TV stations on showed adult programming except for Saturday mornings.
I still have never been to Disneyland and I was finally able to visit Walt Disney World as an adult in the 1980's When EPCOT had just opened.
Walt Disney World wasn't Disneyland, but it did have the Magic Kingdom.
And after watching the weekly teases of Mr. Walt Disney showing and describing everything about Disneyland's Magic Kingdom.
Anytime I was allowed to watch the shows, I would.
So to answer your question...
I loved walking down Magic Kingdom's Main Street and seeing the castle.
I now like seeing everything at nighttime with everything lit up, and the fireworks, and the parades at night.
I love the nightly castle lightings along with the other parks.
I love being able to get in any attraction queue with everyone else and sometimes being able to roll onto an accessible ride.
I haven't stayed off-site in a long time. And I like being able to arrive by plane and worry about trying to obtain accessible transportation to Walt Disney World.
And once on the property, I have my choice of using a bus or a sidewalk or a boat or a monorail or a Skyliner to get where I want to go on property.
So many choices. So many places to visit. And my wheelchair is accessible, unlike other vacations.
So there are probably more reasons I like to.
Every first two weeks in December, I plan my annual trip to Walt Disney World to enjoy all the nightly lighted Christmas lights and Christmas music and Christmas shows and Christmas events.
But really do miss a lot of the things that no longer exist like parades, MGM first Christmas light neighborhood you could walk through and EPCOT's Arch of Lights with music. So many now extinct Christmas things.
If I can ever find a
travel agent that specializes in trips to Disneyland including wheelchair planning from airport transportation, hotel/resort, and return I will start planning that Disneyland trip. But I haven't found that travel agent that thinks about or understands all of those needs even though they say they do understand.