For those who know me, you’ll understand this is somewhat surprising. Then again, I’m sitting in London’s Heathrow Airport, so the Coke here is free of high fructose corn syrup, so I can drink without guilt - mostly.
It’s Day 2 of travel to South Africa.
After an hour’s delay at O’Hare, we boarded our flight.
Then, we sat.
We waited for some piece of cargo or another that was running late on account of multiple deluges that have been battering the Midwest this week.
Once loaded, we pulled away onto the runway.
Then, we sat.
One thing I’ve got to hand to our captain, the dude was forthright with the information.
“Folks, it’s Capt. You’llForgetMyNameLater here on the flight deck. No one seems to be taking our calls at the tower, but we’ll let you know as soon as we know something.”
It went on like this for a couple hours.
The Northern Corridor was shut down, and you know how that goes.
On the plus side, no one was seated near me, so I was able to “stretch out” while watching Leap Year. (If you haven’t, let me save you some time. Everyone ends up happy. Even the bar.)
My body and mind aren’t quite on the same page as to whether I’m tired or hungry or know what day it is. I’m hoping the 11-hour flight to Cape Town will sort that out.
I’m still sorting through my thoughts on the trip as far as expectations go. Most important - I never expected this. In my flurry of e-mails home to let folks know I’d made it through the first leg of the journey safely, I wrote this to a friend:
http://autodizactic.com/blog/wp-content/themes/dojo/images/bg-sidebar-five-percent.png); background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; font-style: italic; background-position: 100% 0%; background-repeat: initial initial; ">In other news, I’m going back to Africa - back. That’s crazy, right?
There are these moments when I stop and think about the little and big choices that led to this. I mean, think of all the decisions in my life that have afforded me these opportunities. Three generations ago, my mom’s mom’s mom was born on the banks of a river in the Oklahoma Territory. How’s that for perspective? Whoa.
So, that’s where my brain lives. A taste of this particular moment in my life before I sign off and head to Terminal 5 (I’ve been in the wrong terminal for a few hours now):
http://autodizactic.com/blog/wp-content/themes/dojo/images/bg-sidebar-five-percent.png); background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; font-style: italic; background-position: 100% 0%; background-repeat: initial initial; ">I’m sitting in Heathrow watching the World Cup on my way to Cape Town while chatting on Facebook with a friend in Nairobi. Oh, and yesterday morning, I woke up in Springfield, IL.
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