Sunday, November 19, 2006

Plane Journey 1

Plane journeys seem to hold bad karma for me, and my recent one was no exception.

I arrived at the airport forty minutes before departure, in keeping with airline recommendations. The lady behind the counter informed me I was late AND the last to check in. She couldn't guarantee that my bag would make it onto the flight. I said it was small enough for cabin baggage so I could take it with me. She said I already had a handbag and laptop, my disregard for airline regulations was disappointing, and I "had to, just had to" check the bag in. She made me sign a "i am a very naughty girl and i take full responsibility for the bag not arriving on the same flight as me, beat me please" document. I said, "I am going for a conference, if my bag does not arrive with me, I will have to attend in my jeans and skivvy." She looked at me as though to say, "And pray WHOSE fault is that?" What she actually said was, "Ooooooh it's gone now, look there it is, tripping merrily along the conveyor belt. Let's hope and pray shall we?" With one of those falsely bright smiles. Which I returned with one of my own dazzling ones. She then reluctantly gave me a boarding pass, perhaps she thought my so-called tardiness meant I should sit on the wing. "Seat number 18C, aisle seat", she said in an ominous tone of voice.

The plane was full and I got to row 18 with difficulty. Someone was in my seat, I groaned mentally and showed my boarding pass. The man looked at his wife and said, "She says this is her seat. Is that right?" I felt like replying, "No it isn't true, I have this penchant for false claims. I am a bad girl, didn't the ground staff tell you I signed a letter to that effect?" Of course, the good girl in me kept me silent. They consulted their documents and agreed with me. The problem now was that they were both wedged into their seats, and each time they tried to get up, all the seats on the aircraft were in danger of getting ripped off their bases. Woolly mammoths, that's what they were - Mister and Missus. I offered to jump over them and take the window seat if that would help. Mr WM said, "Thank you so much young lady, as you can see we are a little large". There were two falsehoods immediately apparent there - my being young, and them being only a little large. He overflowed everywhere, and when the food trolley went past, it side swiped him and took a chunk of his flesh off. He didn't seem to notice. Mrs WM's left thigh oozed into my seat, and though I offered fierce resistance, my flabby muscle was no competition for pure blubber.

The man behind me told me he was claustrophobic, so could I please be kind enough not to recline my seat. I smiled at him very sweetly as I thought terrible curses. The man in front reclined, and reclined. I wondered why he stopped only when the seat had trapped my knees, why not just lie down on my lap?
I then made the fatal mistake of drinking coffee and lots of water. Well, it was a 3 hour trip to the Australian West Coast, and I do get thirsty on flights. However I had disregarded the consequences of three pregnancies and difficult deliveries. I had forgotten the golden rule - never test the urinary continence of a multiparous woman. There were no distractions - I couldn't count clouds as it was dark outside. The inflight movie was Ice Age 2, The Meltdown. All that water, it was cruel. I couldn't even squirm, I was that boxed in. How I suffered, how I mourned my lack of discipline in doing pelvic floor exercises. When we landed, I am sure the speed of my disembarkation was a World Record. I should also get a medal for displaying fortitude under extreme provocation, a couple of golden drops on the seat the only sign that I was crumbling.

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Thoughts on leading a simple life

Last week a friend forwarded an inspirational story to me. She is into such things, I am not. It was about an old man who loses one shoe as he boards a bus. So he throws the other shoe out of the window as the bus starts moving. This is so that whoever found one shoe would have the other too, and hence get some use out of the pair. The story conveyed the importance of not being attached to material things, and how to lead a simple life. I wrote to my friend and thinking I could take liberties with someone I had known for over thirty years, told her it was a crock of shit. She was annoyed, and said clearly I was beyond redemption. I felt bad and in order to demonstrate my remorse to her, I decided to follow the example in the story.

So today, I threw my shoes out of my office window. This was not a wise decision as they hit someone walking below. A Man. He yelled up, "Susan you bitch of a wife, I already said sorry for coming home drunk last night. And anyway, what are you doing on the first floor of this building when I most definitely left you at home 20 minutes ago?"  I yelled back, "Susan does not work here, I am trying to lead a simple life." 

I heard The Man mutter, "You are simple all right, simple in the head." He shouted up to me in a very loud voice, "You STUPID WOMAN, why are you throwing shoes at someone other than your own husband?" I replied, "Excuse me Mr Rude Man, firstly you don't know whether I have a husband. Secondly, I don't throw things at my husband. Thirdly, I am just trying to lead a simple life by giving away my shoes." 

The Man asked, "What use do I have for a pair of red stilettos?" Now I was worried because I don't wear stilettos, red or otherwise; and my shoes this morning were definitely black low heeled ones. I looked down and saw that my feet were still shod in those black shoes. Out of the corner of my eye, I noticed that my colleague looked very upset. Looking at her bare feet, I knew that something somewhere was very very wrong. And that I should keep my shoes on and start running.
Such are the perils of trying to be good. Clearly I am doomed to gross imperfection.

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