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As you know, we usually travel light, but overseas living for three months requires us to pack a little more. On August 5, at the easy-to-manage Zurich airport, we checked our two, roll-on duffel bags at 5 am for the 7am flight on British Airways to London Heathrow, unaware of what awaited us there. We carried on two backpacks and two day packs. Our flight from Zurich to London was under two hours, and they served a small breakfast sandwich and coffee, which we later believed to be the sustaineth that helped us forget about our stomachs and instead face the situation at Heathrow.
luggage, bags, souvenirs |
Bad news: we landed at one end of Heathrow and departed from an American Airlines gate located light years away. We ran. We went through Express security and a second security before reaching the corridor that led to our gate, and, to our surprise, yet another security checkpoint. But this checkpoint was different - we saw a teeming mass of people in three blurry lines funneling toward one desk where two frantic agents were checking EVERY detail of EVERY passport. EVERY person had a bag, a purse, a suitcase on wheels, and a plastic bag of souvenirs! We thought of the overhead bins. We thought of the Row 28 overhead bin and hoped for space to store our backpacks. We were comforted to know our plane was out there and that at least 250-300 people in front of us (and more behind us) also wanted on that shiny new plane. However, we felt a little anxious when we were pulled from the people constellation and directed to a small security checkpoint to our right. Thirty minutes and 100 people already on the plane later, we were told that we needed a small sticker on the backs of our passports....Express security had forgotten and we didn't know to ask. Stickers were stuck and we slowly shuffled into the blurry line, still far from the two lonely agents inspecting EVERY passport.We eventually made our way inside the plane, down the narrow isle to our seats on Row 28 where one tiny space was left in the bin above. We stuffed one backpack in and another one waaaaaay back on Row 39. Everyone who had boarded ahead of us had a handle in tow and the occupied bins proved it.
Lift off! Settled in and satisfied, we noted that someday we were going to make a final flight.
Here is how it will happen:
- No running
- No worries
- No gate agents
- No stickers
- No Express Security
Passports |
- No passport inspections
- No overstuffed bins
- No lines
- No anxiety
- No luggage or souvenirs
We are going to be airlifted. Are you?
Keep looking up! And, thank you for following our Steppingstones...on every journey!
J:m and L:nda
1 comment:
This is a great article!
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