In about ten minutes I will have been
awake and on the move for twenty-four hours.
I got up at 3:30 AM to head to the airport and depart for Denver, then
for Chicago, then Vienna, Austria.
That was the plan anyway. What ended up happening was the flight from
Pasco to Denver ended up delayed, and so I had to haul my butt across the span
of 40 gates in 5 minutes to get to my connection from Denver to Chicago. That went over fine (aside from the fact that
my backpacks suddenly seemed about 50 pounds heavier than they probably
are). However, we ended up landing in
the beautiful city of Peoria rather than Chicago, due to the fact that Mother
Nature had decided to blow a massive storm in over Chicago and cause ground
delays airport-wide.
About an hour later we got into Chicago
and I went immediately to customer service because I had looked at the display
board and it hadn’t said anything about a Vienna flight, so I just assumed that
it had departed already. Ahead of me was a couple speaking in German; they
asked where Austrian Airlines were of the associate at the desk, and took off
for Terminal 5 looking for the flight. I
was really tempted to follow them, but by then there was a huge line behind me
and I was near the front of it, so I decided not to chance it and just wait
patiently in line.
Turns out I really should have considered
following them like the lost little puppy I feel like I am. I think the plane got delayed the same amount
of time I was delayed for, because when I got to the counter, the associate
told me that the flight was just in the runway and now I was going to be
rescheduled to Brussels.
Okay, so maybe my geography isn’t so
great, but I definitely had to pull out my phone and do a google search for
what country Brussels was in. (Belgium,
by the way.)
Off I went on a flight to Brussels, where I was seated next to a Chinese man from Peoria and a Iranian-Swedish photographer from the south bit (he said the name, but I can’t remember it to save my life). We had a rather pleasant, odd, but slightly disjointed conversation about physics, the space-time continuum, the existence of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, photography and Canon lenses (which he swears to), communications versus science, he showed me a bunch of gorgeous photos of Sweden and told me to come visit this semester, and then we took off and it ended up being a pretty silent flight.
I thought it was funny the Chinese man
ended up watching some kind of Chinese love drama and then Need for Speed,
which is a testosterone-jacked-up movie about cars and how fast they go. I just read my book and slept alternately.
I am way too polite for my own good I
think. About midnight I really had to go
to the bathroom, and I was in the window seat.
I waited about half an hour before tapping my companions hesitantly, and
neither of them woke up after about five minutes of tapping. I got nervous and called the flight attendant
to ask for advice. She seemed rather
aggravated and ended up hitting the men on the shoulder pretty hard and they
woke up and let me out. I felt kind of
bad, but I guess you gotta do what you gotta do.
Speed up about three hours and we are over
Dover. I looked out the window to see if
I could see the famous White Cliffs of Dover, but I didn’t spot them. Instead I got to watch us cross the channel
between England and Belgium, which had a ton of tiny little white clouds and
was very beautiful. Looking down on both
countries, you could see the difference between them and the US.
Where the US cities are very planned out
in squares, everything in Belgium and England looks more like little starry
patches – the center of the patch of buildings spreads out in all directions
and then trails off in pointy clumps and becomes fields and agricultural
sections, or big puffy trees.
When our plane sunk lower it was easier to
see the buildings, and they look different from ours too. While we have lots of separate houses, I got
to see my first English flats, and a lot of stacked residential areas whose
buildings tended to look pretty different.
And then I showed up in Belgium and got
told that I would have to wait another good four hours until I get to fly the
final two hours to Austria. I’m really
tired and I want to sleep, but I also don’t want to leave my stuff sitting out
with a ton of people around me.
I had to cash in 20 euros to get some
water and some change for the pay phone.
A water bottle over here cost $4.75, or roughly 3 euros, which I think
is kind of ridiculous. I also had to pay
two euros for the one minute phone call, because the first machine was broken
and just ate my coin without working.
People here are very patient, speak
English slowly, smile at me very sympathetically, and point me in the right
direction with very specific instructions, like I’m a small child. I think I look very tired and lost and I don’t
mind it at all. Specific is good when
all the signs look sort of like “Ook éében das hoek negenbehrer” etc., etc. I kid you not, I saw a word with a double
“é”. If É is supposed to be an accent,
why would you have to accent the same letter twice in a row?
For example, whatever language “Ultgang”
is – it makes me think more of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart than “Exit”. I know I am decent at languages and
comprehending general meanings without having learned the language at all, but
even my talents are failing me at this point.
I had forgotten how well European people
dress. I feel really outclassed by a
bunch of them. You can kind of tell
which ones are European before they even start talking, for the most part. Who would want to wear such fancy clothes for
an 8 hour flight, that’s what I want to know?
And why do all of them look polished and put together and I look like I
got swiped through a grease machine? It’s incredibly unfair.
In the hour and a half I’ve been sitting
here, I haven’t heard a single native English speaker. However, most of the European guys that have
talked to me, started off their conversations in English, so I guess I look
pretty American.
The European guys were really nice. They wanted to know why I was lugging around
such a big backpack while I’m so small.
I am wondering the exact same thing.
The longer the day goes, the heavier it gets, I swear someone’s putting
rocks in it.
I saw some phone charging stations but I
can’t find my converter (it must be in my suitcase) and the charging stations
also make you pedal to generate power, and I am too tired and sweaty and
intimidated by the goodlooking Europeans to want to submit myself to that.
Here’s to hoping nothing goes wrong from
here on out...
I never want a window seat again now if I am sitting next to strangers! A girls gotta go when a girls gotta go right? So show those guys whos boss! Just kidding I would have been freaking out too!
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