Traveling, fuck it.
In the haze of light filtering in through the crispy off-color shades in my room, I awoke much earlier than necessary and felt the weight of another enormous day leaning on my subconscious. Packed previously, the daily rinse, brush and dress included a new subroutine in which I obsessed about every article of clothing or bath item I came into contact with, twice, before allowing the pre-programmed actions to continue on. Despite redundancy and procedurally filling in a mental checklist of preparedness, I knew I had time for mental lubrication.
California is cold. I walked down the dusty sidewalk almost alone except for the mothers and children strolling to school. My local 7/11 was run by Pakistanis. Three old ones, one young one on Sundays. I filled up on of my eco-friendly mugs with coffee and left the store. Vegetarians, ecologists and hippies would not allow me to join their cult, but I do think they’d be impressed with my considerate nature over the whole thing. Besides the butterfly effect theory, I don’t really think big change is possible without enormous and swift societal swings. Also, those swings are impossible without a horrific catalyst. Otherwise life is slow, and people let the world rot before they replace the foundation.
Lo! Phone! My ride arrived early, quieting the miniature ulceric knot in my stomach. He was not a local of Los Angeles, but I thought he was a perfect fit for the phony mold cast by a hundred years of nerdy jews trying to fuck beautiful farm girls. As he lit half a cigarette and tailgated a Mercedes Benz in the carpool lane, we snotched about sports. Then jobs. Then girls. Then sports one last time until arriving at the airport.
He reminded me to pay him for the drive, an unlimited insult in the midwestern world of close friends, but a regularity for meaningless labor on the west coast. It was nothing talk about, yet dirty as if he’d made me eat ash from his cigarettes. Fine. Whatever.
Into the anthill. Armed with and e-ticket and attitude, I circumvented fat bickering families in claustrophobic cheese mazes, for the convenient solitude of the faceless machine. I swiped my credit card. It had no idea who I was. I entered my name, first and last. Still nothing. Next, my middle name. Nope. My cell phone rang, the multitask began. The struggle of malfunctioning touchscreen menus mixed with an intern from the office who could not understand how to complete the very redundant and mundane task I had assigned her the day before. Eventually, I was able to fix both problems with the same method; lowest common denominator instructions.
Security was next. I knew my luck was dry, but was not prepared for the hundred or so people snaked around the array of metal privacy invaders. It was an uncomfortable treck to the head of the line. The nature of a snake line allows for one to pass the same obnoxious people more than once, as well as increases the number of assholes one’s likely to encounter. There was a baby crying, an Indian man on the phone, a strange looking Hollywood-type who stared at me funny, and a younger guy who had too many buttons undone in front of his chest and was obviously trying to make eye contact with anyone who might realize he looked just like Leonardo DiCaprio and would make the best “next” actor.
When I did reach the front, the seemingly endless line jutted in six directions, and a portly and unconditionally bitchy woman checked everyones I.D.’s and sent them in a direction. She smiled disgustingly at my drivers license, and sent me after what looked like a retired couple from Ohio, a high-priced hooker, two yuppies that might have been activists and a woman who was probably an executive for a consulting firm, because she was the only one who stripped, gripped, packed and pushed her personal belongings onto the security conveyor like she’d done it every day of her life. I wasn’t too bad myself, except that I had to remove my belt, which I wasn’t used to traveling with. It’s always embarrassing to put a belt on a conveyor. It always reminds me of making a cow eat steak or when a schizophrenic finds out he’s not quarterback for the Denver Broncos.
The Ohio couple bickered and was very slow to remove their shoes. They argued with the security guards and had an air of general snootiness towards everyone. He was probably an accountant who had never had to stand for a whole day. She was probably a high school guidance councilor. The guards were pissed by the time the two were through the metal detector, so they overreacted and threw the Indian man into the “random” pat-down area of security and made sure to hassle the yuppie couple behind him. I felt the executive in front of me heave a great sigh at the same time as me. She was practically forcing the conveyor belt to accept the yuppie’s luggage. I didn’t blame her. But I did notice a small mustache on her top lip.
The Ohio couple backed the Indian and the yuppies up, unable to process all their meaningless shit fast enough. Not a word was spoken in the awkward slot where the bins came out. My gut told me there should be a “guy rule” about the whole “reclothing after the metal detector” thing, like a urinal situation with only two toilets. But there were no private parts hanging out, so I couldn’t think of a good way it would be implemented.
Finally the executive woman was through in front of me, and I shoved my bin and bag through the metal detector and quickly went through the body check. Security never hassled me. Ever. I’m not even threatening compared to a retired couple, I guess. I think it’s because I smile and understand the bullshit the guards go through. Who wants to work in a people industry? I sure don’t. Especially one where people are trying to “pull a fast one” by bringing toe-nail clippers onboard. Enforcing silly rules gets old fast.
Eventually I made it through and hobbled and hopped away from the checkpoint as I tried to retie and slide-on my converse shoes. They weren’t easy to slip on and off. In my delirious sleep-deprived hurry I’d decided style was more important. Hence the converses. Hence the belt. Usually these items made the “pack” not the body.
Airport food was always overly expensive. I had a bagel and coffee for eight bucks and sat down at a table and stared at a couple of thirty somethings and their two year old trying to eat. They were arguing about where to put the luggage, trying to keep the kid contained to his chair, and smiling at each other like it was the best vacation they’d ever been on. I’ll never understand parenthood, from what I hear, even parents aren’t always sure about it.
The plane was an hour late, and I had a lot of time to answer yet another phone call from the intern at work and re-tell her how exactly she was supposed to do her job for the day. I also had time to call a friend, write a novel and stir up enough political buzz in Canada that they were almost ready to invade Alaska by the time I was ordered to board the plane.
We boarded by section. The people who payed two hundred dollars more than the rest of us got on ten minutes before me. They got to sit in their tiny seats and stare at everyone as they got on. They also got better magazines. I guess that’s worth the convenience charge, since there’s no food or video entertainment for anyone.
The pilots did not come on the comm. We did not leave the gate. The stewardesses nervously paced back and forth between the cabins and their small stewardess-checkpoints. They “managed” people’s luggage problems by offering “positive” criticism on how certain individuals were loading their bags in the overhead bins. They paced nervously some more. We still didn’t leave.
It’d been fifteen minutes. Then twenty. Finally after twenty three minutes one of the women came on the intercom and told us the pilots had not landed at our airport yet. That we were waiting for them to make it to our gate. The plane had been an hour late boarding, now it was twenty minutes late leaving the gate after we boarded.
When the pilots finally arrived, it was forty minutes after we’d all been sitting there. They apologized, weather over the city they’d flown from prevented them from taking off. Airplanes were run by a business. Businesses were sometimes prone to mismanagement. Yadda yadda yadda. There would still be a charge for snacks. But everyone was entitled half of a can of coke and a very suspect and miniature bag of mixed nuts courtesy of the airline we had spent over a hundred dollars on for a seat. But nobody wanted justice that early in the morning. They just wanted to get the plane off the ground and get to the destination.
Traveling, fuck it.