In Italy, Jenna Bush Hager discovered that traveling with young children is less about perfection and more about surrender. As Hal drifted in and out of sleep under the soaring ceilings of the Vatican, she watched the collision of wonder and exhaustion play out on his small face. Every time his eyes fluttered open, he clung to the moment, stubbornly refusing to miss the magic around him.
Back home, his joyful “Grazie mille! Buongiorno!” echoing through their house became a living souvenir, proof that kids absorb more than we think, even when they seem half-asleep. Jenna’s stories revealed the real heart of family travel: the messy naps, the off-schedule meltdowns, the unexpected pride when your child claims a new word, a new place, as their own. In the end, it wasn’t the landmarks that stayed with her, but the feeling that, for a brief time, Italy belonged to Hal.