Changing up the pace a bit from hiking and the Alps, I'm going to post someone from our time in the Netherlands. One of the days, we were granted the use of a car to do with as we pleased for the day. We had some grand plans of going to visit the Delta works and so, but by this point in the journey we were pretty burned out and just wanted a short, relaxing trip. Driving to the Delta works probably would have been amazing, but it was still hours of driving away. So, instead we headed off to "The Hague" (sounds funny to me, as it is Den Haag in Dutch) and visited "Escher in the Palace" AKA the Escher Museum. The building itself was quite beautiful, as is called a palace because during the 18th and 19th centuries it was a palace, and Queen Emma stayed there until 1891.
The museum itself was very thought out, with the progression of rooms following Escher's work through his life chronologically, which also is the same thing as from normal to mind-bending. Much of his earlier work was quite mundane, though perhaps showing bits and pieces of what would show up in his later works.
By the end, it was just rooms filled with tessellations, impossible perspectives, and all of the other work that Escher is so well known for.
I thoroughly enjoyed the entire experience and gained a new appreciation for Escher's genius and unique his mind was.