May. 24th, 2004

pameladean: (Default)
Update: Before the dithering, rather than at the end of the entry as is traditional.

[livejournal.com profile] minnehaha B sensibly asked me where I had heard such a silly story about checked baggage, so I went to the website where I'd seen it, planning to provide the URL, and found the assertion clean vanished. It was Orbitz, and they are redoing their site, which may or may not explain anything.

Despite now feeling very silly, I have to say that no matter what kind of nonsense I post here, I am always charmed and delighted by the little vignettes people provide when they answer my questions. I loved getting tiny glimpses of people's recent travel. And you are all very kind indeed.

The original entry follows in all its loopy glory.

I continue to despise the Bush Administration and all its works. And I do mean all, all, all.

In lesser but more immediate news:

In a burst of financial irresponsibility, I am going to visit Eric from June 5th through June 12th. We have a lot of clever plans to minimize spending money, and in fact I think that they will work. However, one can only get as cheap a plane ticket as is on offer -- and the $153 round-trip offer from United turned out to be some kind of glitch, utterly unreal. Anyway, I've bought an actual ticket, it's non-refundable, I'm committed, and I'm not sorry.

I'm just stressed. Actual frequent travellers, can you tell me, is it in fact the case that there is a law requiring that passengers be reunited with their baggage at the end of every flight, so that if one is changing flights on the same airline one must retrieve one's baggage and then recheck it for the next flight? And if this is so, are any concessions being made to the fact that it's almost always a huge trek to and from gates to baggage claim, and that some people (me, with my cheap ticket, say) have only a 45-minute layover to begin with, and the security people reserve the right to refuse to check your baggage if you appear before them less than half an hour before flight time?

Yeah, I could call the airline, but calling the airline has never worked very well for me. Their website doesn't say anything about it. I'll do that if I have to.

I have evolved a nice comfy method of packing that involves putting most of my stuff in checked luggage and forgetting about it until I reach my destination. My suitcase can be carried on, but I really, really don't want to do that. I hate airplanes, I hate flying, if I have to get on one of the damnable machines I want to just shove my bag of essentials under the seat as quickly as possible and settle in to be inconvenienced for three hours. I'm too short to see into the overhead bins and sometimes too short to heave a suitcase up into them. The great thing about my current packing arrangements is that I can do everything by myself -- the suitcase has wheels and a little handle and will trundle obediently over almost any surface. I don't want to lug it and the knapsack onto the bloody plane. I don't want to be asking strangers to put it into the overhead bin. (It will fit under some airline seats but not all.)

I have never found a set of tips on packing light that was of any use to me whatsoever. I need to be comfortable on the plane, not to wear my hiking boots and my heavy clothes that take up a lot of room. I need to take stuff with me, not spend extra money buying more of it when I arrive. I need to bring food, since there's no guarantee that I can eat what's on offer and I can't afford to buy it anyway. That is to say, I my bag of essentials is pretty hefty already; adding a suitcase just messes me up.

When I had this nice streamlined arrangement that worked for me, I could almost forget how much I hate, hate, hate flying. But now I'm remembering.

I'm pretty sure that a lot of this panic is caused by previous underlying and ongoing stress of other sorts. I really need to be able to just go on automatic for the trip. But it looks like they want to hand me a manual transmission with a dodgy clutch.

People should feel free to offer suggestions, but I may just ignore them. I'm not up to explaining why I need to take this or that and then arguing over whether I really do need to do so.

Pamela
pameladean: (Default)
Not about travel, or only indirectly. In any case, my agent just got my book contracts in the mail, and is planning to turn them around for me very fast. If all goes absolutely perfectly, I might be able to afford to buy a sandwich in the airport, though I'd actually prefer not to. Having the option to do so is what reduces stress. Choices are what reduce stress. It's very good news even if the money doesn't come in until I'm home again.

Pamela

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