Friday, September 2, 2011

London Town


Getting to London is no fun. Being in London is fabulous.
Here is the story of my journey to London. I will try to just tell it as factually as possible without letting my feelings of bitter resentment get in the way.

I am packing in a rush to leave for the airport, when we realize my suitcase is completely falling apart, so I spend the ride to the airport in the back seat switching all my stuff to a different suitcase. I got rather car sick in the process.
We get to the airport in record time. One of my bags is only 36 lbs (leaving plenty of room to shop, of course). I grab a cinnabon, then sit at the gate. We are supposed to be boarding, but instead we get the announcement that the captain is missing. "We are pretty sure he is in the airport. He may be in the air, but we think he is in the airport." Ok, no big deal, it is 3:15 and my flight in detroit is not until 6:55.

The captain shows up and we board the plane. Then, we deboard. Mechanical difficulties of some sort. Luckily, there is an identical plane just one gate over. So, we board that plane. This process took about an hour, I don't know why. As it turned out, the plane was identical to the former in all aspects, including the mechanical difficulties. The minutes tick by, while every 5 minutes the crew is telling us they will let us know what is happening in about 5 minutes. At this point, everybody was on the phone about their missed connections. It is now about 5:45. I am on the phone with my dear friend, Arianna, who had bought me McDonalds and was asking the lady at the gate what the chances were of me making the flight. The woman told her there were several people on my flight who were trying to catch the flight to London so they could wait until 7, which was when my flight was supposed to get in.

My mother is on the phone, first telling me to get off the flight because she didn't think I was going to make it. Then, she says it doesn't look like there is another flight to London for the next 2 days, from Cincinnati or Detroit. So my only hope is staying on the plane and trying to catch the flight.
I did nothing but pray and wrinkle my empty cup up in my hands over and over again during the flight. We don't arrive in Detroit until 7:20. Arianna doesn't pick up her phone, the flight had already taken off. It turns out, it left at 6:48.
I have never missed a flight before in my life (despite a few recent close calls). So, I follow everyone else and get in line at the service desk to find a new connection. I talk to the first person, who says my best option is staying in a hotel in Detroit that night and catching a flight to Amsterdam the next night, then London after that. I then talk to someone on the help phones who says the same thing.
My parents are making calls and getting no further than I am
. The line dies down, so I get back in line to talk to a different person to see if I can fly home to Cincinnati that night instead. That seemed better than 24 hours in a Detroit hotel room. I continued to have a very incoherent conversation with the woman, who gave me the flight to Cincinnati, but wouldn't tell me if I could get back to Detroit for the flight to Amsterdam, and told me I had to talk to people on the phones. I told my mom what she had said, and she told me to stay on the phone go talk to her again. So, I approach the desk, and here is the gist of the conversation ( I believe her name was Deborah Anne):
DA- "What?"
Me-"Hi, if I go back to Cincinnati, what are my options of getting to London from there?"
DA-"Well is there a direct flight from Cincinnati to London?"
Me-"I'm not sure, if there is I think it is full."
DA- looking stuff up... "Oh, there is a flight that leaves Cincinnati tomorrow night and gets into London the next morning, connecting in Boston."
Me-"That sounds great!"
DA- says nothing, is doing stuff on her computer...
My mother on the phone-"So are you on the flight?"
Me-"I'm not sure, I think so"
DA-"Oh, I booked you on the flight. When I said it was an option, I booked you."
Me-"Oh, great, thank you."
DA-"Why didn't you just book that flight in the first place?"
Me-"Because I was trying to get there by tomorrow morning."
DA-"You just can't do that with these European flights."
Me- In state of confusion.
a few minutes later...
DA-"You are in London for a month?"
Me-"Three months"
DA-"What are you going to do without your mommy there to solve all your problems?"
Me- Jaw dropped and speechless.

At this point I don't even remember the rest of the conversation. All I could think about was staying polite, and escaping this woman as fast as possibly with my tickets.
The plane back to Cincinnati was delayed, because, as the captain explained, they had been delayed all day...

I get home, and leave the next day for Boston. I make it to London without a hitch that time. When I talk to the guy in the customs line, he asks me the basic questions, then asks me how much money I have with me. Then he asks me how much I have for the 3 months I am there. I tell him about what is in my checking account, and he sneers and says,"Do you know how expensive this country is?" I assure him that I will be ok, I have already paid for my lodging and food. He then asks, "Who supports you?" "My parents." He sneers again and mumbles, "Figures." "I worked over the summer and made money." He doesn't respond and hands me back my passport. A lady on my flight walks away next to me and says, "Wow, it sounded like you got the third degree!"
I know.
I talk to a friendly irish lady I sat near on the plane while I wait for my bags that I know won't be there. Then I report it to the delta desk, and they inform me my bags are on a flight to Amsterdam at the moment and will be getting in around 2 that afternoon. They will deliver them later that day.
Great, at least this way I don't have to haul them to the centre.
I make it to the centre in a daze at this point. It is wednesday afternoon. I don't see my bags until late thursday night. At least I filled out a form that gave me a voucher for my checked baggage fee, so I won't have to pay that on my way home.

Now I have my bags, and am living in London. Life is good. The girls here are great, the directors are so nice, and this city is fabulous. Our assignments are things like, go to a park and watch something there for half an hour. Write about it and sketch it. You have the rest of the day to explore the city. Ok, I can do that.

My only complaint at the moment would be the food in the center. The cook is a very nice woman who likes to experiment. This was dinner tonight...


It is a good thing we can have gelato and chocolate croissants basically anywhere else we go :)


Life Lesson:
I have seen the whole experience as a good life experience, and I learned that while being nice and polite to people won't necessarily get you what you want, but it will make you feel better about the way you acted. Also, the lady did get nicer by the end of our conversation. I can only image what could have happened if I had snapped back at her. For some reason, I found my self wanting to be even nicer to all the people I came in contact with at the airport afterwards. That is still a phenomenon I do not understand.
I am sure my next post will have a much better ratio between the positive and negative vibes. I am sorry for this one.


Monday, January 31, 2011

Oh Boys


What my little brother and his 15-year-old friends left as a tip for their waitress at California Pizza Kitchen... Watch out ladies, they are smooth....

Yes, the note does say "Your beutiful" with a heart.
They may not be the best spellers or grammatically correct, but they are charming.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

What I Never Thought I'd Learn in School

I found something interesting while studying human development today. While reading in the chapter about socioemotional development in early adulthood, I came across this useful piece of information...

"Women tend to rate as most important such traits as considerateness, honesty, dependability, kindness, understanding, and earning prospects; men prefer good looks, cooking skills, and frugality."


So many conversations had at BYU are running through my mind right now...

Thoughts?

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Finally- a title.

So I have had this in mind for a title for a while now, i've just been too lazy to actually change it. I was reading Eat Pray Love (a good book that I haven't actually gotten around to finishing yet) and I came across this phrase. The author says how it is ancient greek for the singular balance of the good and the beautiful. I thought it was cool. Shouldn't that be what we are striving for? Plus, it is a little shout out to my Greek ancestry. Holla.

It isn't anything terribly inspirational or creative, but it'll do. Just like the rest of my blog.

Friday, October 22, 2010

mmmmm

Elizabeth Daun, it is all your fault. This started when I read your blog post a while back where you mentioned oreos. So one night, we are all starving and grab some snacks before a movie. I get oreos.

Since that night, I have eaten 3-4 oreos every night at almost exactly midnight.
Why is it that milk by itself is decent, oreos by themselves are honestly only mediocre, but milk and oreos together? Delicious chocolaty goodness. This is not a healthy habit.

Don't worry mom, my roommates and I are determined to start up jillian michaels any day now.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Catch Up


I am terrible at blogging! Things happen, I tell myself I'll blog about them, then other things happen, I get busy, then all of a sudden there are tons of things to blog about and it seems too overwhelming to do.

Well, I have now been living at liberty square and going to school for a few weeks now. I am pretty much really liking it. All of my classes are actually interesting. I sort of read my text books for fun sometimes. I still can't decide if I want to be a nurse.

Liberty square... very social. It helps that I already knew about half the girls in my ward from last year, and half the guys in my ward know either my cousin or Taylor Jensen. So another thanks to the Jensen family for allowing me to have more friends. I thought being in a ward with a bunch of RMs would be weird, and that they would seem really old... but they don't. Not really at all.

I love my roommates. They are all great.

I love hot dog fridays.

I hate parking.

I'm nervous for the Reds when it comes to playoff time.

I miss my Holladay in Holy Land friends, I always will, but I am making new friends.

I have yet to really cook for myself. It just never seems worth it, and its hard to find meals for just one person. I like cooking for multiple people better, but that doesn't happen very often. I also like people cooking for me.........

I am STILL in the process of getting back into the swing of studying. I honestly am not even taking that hard a course load right now and i'm still barely keeping up with it. I need better self-discipline.

I realize I need to take more pictures. All I have are ones of my really great apartment, my new toms, and some really terrible pictures from a group of studs' intramural football game. I don't think anyone really wants to see those.

I think it is supposed to rain tomorrow. I am so excited. It doesn't rain enough here.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Favorites




Some of my new favorite things:
-Hatch's hot chocolate
-Zumba
-Anne of Green Gables



















Some of my old favorites:
-Normandy Cafe
-My Holladay friends
-Great Harvest Bread