Traveling
is a great way to broaden your horizons. You see things and meet people you
wouldn’t ordinarily. It’s wonderful to have these new experiences under your
belt. What happens when your odyssey is hindered by others?
Last
Spring, I went to New Jersey for a weekend workshop. I had an early flight and
after getting through TSA, was sitting at the waiting area of my plane’s gate.
Everyone was on a mobile device or having quiet conversations. It was before 7
am and no one wanted to be loud, let alone awake. CNN played on the television
in the waiting area, which normally would’ve been fine. Not this morning however.
One woman was especially cantankerous. Not helping matters, was the fact that
the missing plane from Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 had just disappeared. This
woman took special issue with CNN’s report.
“Oh my
God!” she fumed. “Why WOULD they play this? Don’t they know we’re about to
board a plane?!”
Apparently, not only was she bothered by how inconsiderate CNN’s news delivery
was, but she wanted us to know. It just seemed odd that she thought a news
network was out to ruin her flight. I tried desperately to ignore her rant. I
was sleepy and just wanted to get on my plane.
As the
plane began to board, I hope the enraged woman would be calm on the
flight. I hoped in vain. No sooner had I
taken my seat did she come barging up the tiny aisle with a massive quilt
jumbled in front her. She pushed past me, bumping my arm hard as I was reading.
I chose to let that slide because if I hadn’t I would’ve gotten kicked off the
plane. I confess, I am not a morning person.
When the
flight ascended, I heard grumbles from the back of the plane. About five minutes
later, she must have fallen asleep because there was silence. Sweet, glorious
silence. When the plane landed at O’Hare, I grabbed my carry on and hurried
off. I silently prayed she wasn’t on my next flight. Thankfully, she wasn’t.
When
traveling it’s best to take your manners with you instead of leaving them at
home. A plane is a vessel containing people of various backgrounds and social
graces. Let the other passengers remember the flight instead of you.
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