June 10, 2012
08:45
Delhi Airport
Costa Coffee Lounge
(DFW = June 9, 2012 22:15)
| Mudras decorate the entrance to immigration. |
| First non-airplane food in sixteen hours. Ah, the simple things in life! |
Back to the issue at hand. I’m stuck here, unable to go
downstairs. Nor am I able apparently to go outside. A nice man with a machine
gun instructed me in broken English to go a different exit, but I’d rather not
risk not being able to enter the airport again since the reason behind all my
trouble stems from confusion about a boarding pass that I still don’t have. My
fault of course for not reading carefully all three boarding passes I received in
DFW. But that was nearly thirty-six hours ago. That’s already a very different
girl from the one I am now. One who was nervous about Indian toilets and
understanding Indian English. Both things are not so daunting now as the Delhi
airport has made the transition for Westerners pretty seamless.
Sit down toilets have both toilet paper and hoses to wash
oneself. Neither the immigration nor the customs officer spoke to me at all,
just took my paperwork and ushered me along. So I’m in India, but I could be in
any pleasant airport in any part of the world really. In fact, I’m sitting in a
Costa Coffee café, trying to remember if it wasn’t in the Costa Rica airport
that I first encountered this chain.
| Indira Gandhi International Airport as seen from one of it's huge windows. |
To be honest, though I miss my partner in crime Michaela,
who didn’t have the same trouble with her boarding pass and hopefully made our
original flight, and though I don’t wish to worry Dr. Unnithan who offered to pick us up from the airport, I’m
actually enjoying my unexpected turn of events. Once I realized I would most
likely be missing my flight, the nervousness of trying to rush left me, and I
let a smile escape my lips as I thought, “Well, I came for an adventure, and so
it begins.” It reminded me of the most important experience of traveling, one
that I enjoy immensely when I remember to breathe.
I can’t quite put it in words. Something about the journey
not the destination doesn’t encompass the true heart of it because if it were
so, I wouldn’t need to travel to experience it. Learning how to be self-sufficient
doesn’t work either. That’s something I’m still trying to master at home.
Traveling in one way makes a person realize how much we rely
on each other whether it’s to book a new flight, find a restroom, or order
food. The desire for self-sufficiency becomes absurd as I realize what an
illusion that idea is. Maybe those simple but not always easy to swallow ideas
are the reason I travel. Of course they can be experienced at home, but like
most people, I find myself drawn to the comfort of autopilot when I’m at home,
leaving said ideas well enough alone as I comfort myself with the idea that I
have control over my experience. Here, stuck in the Delhi airport, following
another culture’s unspoken rules that I have to have spelled out to me and so realizing
how little effect my actions have on the outcome of events, I am able to
experience with more clarity the power I do have over the perception of the
events around me and to some extent other’s perception of the events in which I
am a part.
| Statues showing the beauty of yogic sun salutations, reminding me to breathe with each movement in life. |
Case in point, Asha, the woman at the ticket counter who first had to tell me I wouldn’t make my flight, and I could have found ourselves exasperated and worn out at the beginning of a long day if I had decided that missing my original flight was unbearable, inexcusable, or oddly enough her fault in some way. Rather, I know from traveling the constraints by which all of us are confined, including official rules, unstated customs, and most importantly in this situation, time. Neither of us had the ability to get me to my flight, so I gratefully accepted the alternative, which was to take the next flight at six o’clock this evening. I had to come back later to get my boarding pass, which gave me time to walk around, find that I was stuck in the airport, and eventually decide to camp out in a very comfy chair in the café and start my blog, something I’ve been looking forward to.
After coffee, breakfast, and a bathroom break, I found that
the line at the ticket counter was gone, and Asha, who knew me as Ms. Lawrence
by now, was very happy to give me a boarding pass and check my bag. There are
so many more complicated and expensive ways this day could’ve turned out, so I’m
glad I got to see Asha again and express my gratitude. From her smile, I
understood the gratitude was reciprocated for my flow-with-the-go attitude.
Acknowledging and accepting the lack of control human beings encounter in a
great majority of situations has allowed me a better understanding of those things
over which we can control, namely ourselves.
I have now past the security check point and am finishing
this blog entry in the domestic terminal of the Delhi Airport waiting for the
next flight to Trivandrum. I was bound to get here one way or another. I’m so
grateful I made it, and this short detour has given me time to look around the
beautiful airport and a moment to reflect on the joyous adventure called
traveling.