The Salt Flats and the pioneers

So, at the very end of July, my daughter Alice and I drove her car from Boulder, Colorado up through Utah, through northern Nevada, over the Sierra Nevada mountains to northern California, land of plenty.

The great Salt Lake is indeed precisely that-great.  Wow, what a magical oasis of water in the middle of rocks and more rocks.  We stopped at Provo and witnessed a lovely sunset, all orange, pink and red on the huge mesa (or buttes?) to the east of that city.  But Nevada just went on forever with nothing but wide stretches of nothing.  No gas, towns, only the ribbon of highway 80 with trucks and cars moving through at speed, looking for the next gas station.

The dramatic shift occurs when you cross into California: trees!  huge Ponderosa pines lines the winding highway through the mountains.  Alice spent about a half an hour reading the story of the Donner party‘s hardships trying to walk across our route to get to California.  Many of them did not make it.  Whew.  Made our drive look way less onerous than it had seemed.

Arriving in Guerneville, California was delightful: vineyards, rolling hills, redwoods.  One can appreciate the astonishment that must have glowed on the settlers as they moved past those awful desert badlands into the beautiful of the state of promises.

Getting to JFK

Ok, so on some cold night when I had clearly lost my mind I made a reservation to fly out of JFK-New York to Vancouver, Canada leaving at 6:40 in the morning.  Yes, that is right. What was I thinking?  Since it is an international flight you are supposed to be there three hours before.  Ok-ay.  Hmm.

So, I try to find a way to get from mid-Long Island to JFK at the godforsaken hours of the night.  The last train leaves at 11:45 or, if I can get to another station, 1:46.  Fine.  That gets me to Jamaica at either around 1 am or 3 am.  Airtrain does run all night.  Check.  But is JFK open?

Ah, that is the question of the century.  “Check the website, duh” you are thinking.  Ah-ha! Gotcha.  I defy you to find the hours of operation on the JFK or MTA websites.  Nadda. No such luck.  Nihil.  The most I can find is that some terminals are open all night but not Terminal 7 (mine, of course) and when that reopens is known to God alone.  And I guess the night janitor?

I will end up hiring Supershuttle and pray that I don’t die an excruciating death on the Southern State Parkway (aka LI Autoban-highway-of-doom) or, everyone’s favorite NYC road: the Belt.  At least the real human whom I eventually was able to connect with via the phone for Supershuttle was super-helpful.

Lesson to be learned: never book a pre-dawn flight unless you happen to live at the airport.  Or, I guess, are the night janitor.

Waiting Rooms

Here I am, sitting in a hospital waiting room. [My husband is getting a routine procedure.] At first I could work on my computer for my online classes, check out an old issue of Consumer Reports, and had just started to read O’Donohue’s The Elements. And then it all went very bad…

Code Red? Waiting patient lost it? Out of tea? No–worse even than the last one, although that would have been pretty serious.

No–someone insisted upon turning on the TV. Now it is impossible to think as the talking heads drone on and on and on about nothing at all. Silence–that which allows us to be reflective human beings is gone.

Why does one person get to make a decision that affects the rest of us poor captives people? Enquiring minds would like to know.  Why can we not simply wait in a waiting room, thinking, reading, even quietly speaking with one another?

And so I stand outside the waiting room in a semi-futile attempt to find my thoughts. Wish me luck.