Currently I'm sitting in a cafe/restaurant drinking sangria and eating french fries. Which seems about right, since I'm in between worlds, here in the airport at Cancun.
I didn't get much sleep taking the red eye from Oakland to Boston despite the fact that I had all three seats to lay out on and conditions were perfect. I was so tired getting into Boston that I ended up looking for a cart and ended up in baggage claims. By the time I got the cart, I realized I had to check back into security, and an hour later I ended up about 10 feet from where I'd gotten off the plane at 6 AM. Then I waited another hour and a half for my next flight.
All in all, today has been a humbling reminder that I need to keep my wits about me, apparently even domestically.
I sat next to a couple on the way to Cancun with thick Boston accents. The woman was wearing about 5 rock star leather bracelets, and the guy some gold loop earrings. Somehow, despite their accessories, they had no interest in talking with me, cool young person that I am. I think I pissed them off by sleeping the whole flight while occupying the aisle seat. I tried to help out by tucking my knees into my sweatshirt and making a ball out of myself, but I have a feeling that just made them resent my flexibility.
When we landed the woman cheered 'Yea Cancun! Tequilllla!'.
When I finally made it to customs with the other gringos, the mexican border guy didn't ask me one question. Just stamped me along. Then I had to fill out a form saying I didn't have any swine flu symptoms, which you can still see the after trauma of here--(like the waiter here offering me a squirt of hand sanitizer before I made my order).
Not surprisingly, on of my suitcase pockets burst, and I had to leave some of the spices and shampoo behind. When I made it out mostly in one piece from customs, a nice handsome porter offered to help me in very good english. I slipped into english with him too, my old shyness coming back, and he took me to the gate for Mexicana.
There a travel agent who handles the (I'm guessing especially US) visas into Havana helped me out while the porter stood guard of my bags with an increasingly achy looking shoulder. Although I missed the first flight I was hoping to get, I did end up getting a much better deal than I expected. She agent me how long I wanted to stay, gave me a 15 dollar two month visa and a roundtrip tickets on Mexicana all for 350. I'm hoping it's all as simple as it seems, because I was thinking it was going to be much harder than that. Here's to trusting people in uniforms and official looking paperwork.
Getting the tickets lifted my spirits and I started speaking to the porter in Spanish, which he seemed shocked I had known all along. I was glad to see he felt more comfortable (rather than patronized) when I slipped into speaking his native language. That said, my accent is not what it was when I left, and I look forward to getting back some of that Cuban slur.
That's it for now. Stay tuned for Habana, and hopefully much more interesting stories to come.
Rachel
Saturday, October 31, 2009
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Love you
ReplyDeleteglad to hear that you're safely on your way!
All's well that ends well--Rachel once again proves her travel worthiness & composure under stress. Let's hear it for the girl!
ReplyDeleteHas Swine Flu gotten really bad in the U.S.? I read a high number somewhere but it was just people infected not people who had died.
ReplyDeleteThe people who worked in the airport in Lima all had face masks on so I don´t think just the U.S. is worried.