1
“The moving walkway is now ending, please look down.” “The moving walkway is now ending, please
look down.” I walk amidst the noise of
motion and conveyor belts. I see feet
all for as far as my eyes can see in this moving crowd of people. Feet of all ages, reckless, restless feet,
walking, running, strutting, clicking fast towards their destination. Where is that destination? It seems we are all constantly running, but
never reaching a place to call home.
Life today needs a destination.
Cell phones ringing, people speaking, suitcases rolling and
reeling. The conveyor belt
lurching—everyone pushing, shoving, screeching to be at the forefront. Airports
speak volumes about us, don’t they?
People are
struggling and striving to lift those few precious belongings thought to be
most important—those material objects that we cannot leave without: important
enough to drag and lug across the world.
I find my own anonymous black bag that evidently needs some sort of
marking like a ribbon…next time, I think. I continue on, suitcase trailing reluctantly
behind, through the roped off labyrinth that is the modern day airport, our own
long awaited futuristic fantasy. This
spiraling path has energy enough within itself to move people like a gigantic
herd of cattle across the Western plains—such a modern day invention: the
spring-back crowd divider. What else
does human ingenuity have in store for us?
I am
wearing a skirt today, something that my grandmother always did. Always.
She had one pair of pants hanging in her closet for years, left
untouched, virginal. Wearing a skirt is
not really conducive to the heave-ho of lifting incredibly weighty luggage and
hopping off and on conveyor belts that tell you what to do or where to go so
that you avoid killing yourself upon propulsion across the terminal.
Finally,
I’m outside. I breathe in deeply in
order to greedily engulf more fresh air than my body has seen for the past 30
hours. My windpipe freezes in surprise
as the cold inhabits my body. It’s been
a good long while since I have felt this kind of cold. It is trying to welcome me home, but I am
having a hard time trying to feel the “open arms” part of the deal, unless
those arms are made of ice. No messages
on my cell phone. What the hell.
I see
him. He’s one lucky bastard. Correct me if I am wrong, but is a ride home
from the airport not one of the perks of a romantic relationship? Isn’t this one of the few roles a boyfriend
is required to take on? Gabe rolls up
quickly, pops open the trunk, and I once again lug my large case into the back
most inelegantly in my skirt and jump into the passenger seat next to him. The only reward that awaits me is a peck on
the cheek. Oh forgive me! I should be
appreciative that he has gallantly come to transport me home. On the contrary. A man should be honored to feel the grace of
a lady’s presence inside his humble carriage.
“Hey. I was wondering why you
hadn’t called. My plane was on time for
once.” We roll off into the sunset.
Sometimes,
I really wish I could go back in time, both in my own life and history. A time when I was still innocent, like a
freshly tanned farm girl, and the world was just a little less insane,
apathetic, and engulfing.
2
She bends down to pick up her purse
as she hears her boarding call. She
looks up to meet my eyes; a look of disgust infects her face as she quickly
understands the motive behind my gaze, then looks away without a thought. There is a certain art in the graceful
movement of a woman. The way she holds
herself, aware of the eyes around her, then shies away as if those eyes were
seeing something they should not. Only
an ankle is revealed from below the cuff of her pant leg. An ankle in this day and age is seemingly
nothing significant at all. Yet her
ankle is so vulnerable, so telling. It
redeems the coldness and hostility of her stare. I could, almost, see inside her soul through
that undulation of skin and bone beneath her calf.
I know she sees me. I can tell by the way she purses her lips,
with a slight bitter gleam in her eye, aware of and enjoying my
admiration. I’ve often wondered whether
women require this silent praise in order to survive and get through life in
our world of generic nameless faces.
Maybe just people in general need the validation that they exist and are
noticed: just the knowledge that someone else appreciates the truth of their
own uniqueness in the world. How does it
feel to be her? This woman, presumably in
her 30’s, has the fate of the world before her.
She wears no rings, therefore she is not tied down. Well, at least not too much. One can only hope that she does not take her
freedom for granted. She is wearing pants,
though. A telling sign. I prefer women in skirts.