As per usual, it's been a while since I've written. 'Cause, you know that you readers are still important to me, but I feel I ought to explain that paying my bills and trying (occasionally unsuccessfully) to enjoy and enlighten myself are substantially more important than making the effort to chronicle my thoughts for your entertainment.
Perhaps it would be more humble to say "for your amusement."
Then again, perhaps it would be more accurate to say "for your bemusement." But this is not the place for wonder whether or not you understand my emotional state. I'm going to an est meeting for that later.
Here, assuming you weren't receiving copies of the surveillance reports for the last six weeks, is part one of the summary of my winter holiday.
Tokyo to New Mexico � Planes, Trains and Automatons at customs
December 13-22: Working.
Imagine your job, but with 40 kids in the room, 50% of whom want you to stare at them while they simultaneously try to explain something of dire importance to a game-boy addicted 9-year old in increasingly louder voices so they can be heard over the other game-boy addicted 9-year olds, and 25% of whom want to touch, pet or climb you, and 25% of whom want to throw pencils, eat paper and say "poo-poo-caca-turds-dookey." But there's no coffee machine, so it's not really like your job after all.
December 23: Lost in the desert, or on the way to the desert, anyway.
We had tickets to fly out of Narita Airport on an ANA flight. After missing the first bus and train we were supposed to take, we finally got underway to the airport and to one of Narita's two terminals. Which was where we discovered that the tickets, which were marked "ANA" with an ANA flight number, were actually for a flight that was being operated by Continental Airlines.
Continental Airlines flies out of the other terminal at Narita.
After much rushing and some barely restrained tempers, we made it to the correct terminal, airline, gate, plane, row and seats. The very small seats in the very narrow rows.
Four hours later, with the seat in front of me resting on my legs which I can�t fully bend or extend, I recall that stress positions were one of the techniques recommended and used to loosen the tongues of people held in Guantanmo and Abu Gharib. Then I remember that I chose to be on this flight, and that it cheapens the plights of others to equate that with being uncomfortable for a couple of hours on a flight that I had the luxury to take. A couple of hours of liberal-guilt-ridden dozing alternating with leg cramps and fear of deep-vein thrombosis followed.
On arrival in Los Angeles, with two and a half hours to make our transfer we discover the following:
1. It now takes immigration officers up to 45 minutes to photograph, fingerprint and process foreign visitors.
2. US security protocols now mandate that any passengers transferring from foreign to domestic flights should collect their checked baggage and go through the security checks again.
3. During the holidays, LAX is capable of sustaining a line at the security gates that takes over three hours from the end of the line to finally being allowed to the gates.
After much kindness from strangers and some line-cutting ahead of less-kind strangers we did just barely make it to the gate before the flight left.
The flight was subsequently delayed.
December 24 � Half-mad shopping. Wrapping presents until 3 am. (This compounded my jet lag, which I never completely got over.)
Tune in next time for Part 2: Driving, drinking, and getting a room comped with no credit cards.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment