Be a princess for a day at Disney World
I forgot my tiara and kept misplacing my wand.
After all, it's not easy being a modern-day Disney princess. You need to keep that tiara firmly on your head; you need to be kind to everyone — even annoying younger siblings. Those long princess dresses and sparkly shoes, though the ultimate in princess fashion, aren't made for running or jumping around theme parks. And then there's the curtsying and the waving and even the proper way to ask for a piece of cake, which a group of young princesses-in-training — their tiaras perfectly in place — quickly found out during princess lessons at the Perfectly Princess Tea at Disney World's Grand Floridian Resort.
Let's not forget the challenges of modern technology. Maggie Davis, 6, had a difficult time getting the hang of things, juggling her wand in one hand, her cell phone in the other, while eating her breakfast at Cinderella's castle at the Magic Kingdom where she and her cousin, Ariel Sandoval, hobnobbed with Snow White, Sleeping Beauty and others.