There is
something funny about the time we take to travel. Not the destination part, but
time taken to get there, to move about, to go from point A to B. This time is
difficult to count, moving across and over international zones, leaving us to
live in the moment and away from the tick tick of a minutehand. Outside of our
agendas. Not quite in our plans.
I love
getting lost in time.
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This lady gets things done in an airport A&W |
Mostly, on-the-plane
time is for secret asides. Watching as many idiotic movies as possible. Drinking
altitude-reinforced whiskey or bloody marys. Sometimes it is for writing. On
some sordid occasions it has been time for working, but let’s forget those.
Because this time should be sacred. It doesn’t count and so is a bonus, a
privilege of extra, at least for someone from a culture of too much.
Because
there are no real rules in travel time, habits and traditions are ours to
invent. I almost never eat Dunkin Donuts outside of an airport, but I’ve now
done it in a dozen states and countries and over three continents. My secret Dunkin
travel addiction. In Indonesia, they have red bean and green tea donuts. Who am
I to turn that down? It would be a cultural affront.
In Tokyo a
day ago on a stopover, I walked the insides of the airport, an extra-time
traveler in her own particular non-space. I’ll be in Tokyo proper in not too
long, but this was already a sense overload. The amount of duty-free chaos in
Narita is overwhelming. So many colors, so many smiling Japanese characters
peering from every adspace, so many samurai boutiques. And the cleanest
toilets- with and without bidets- I have every seen. All with the overarching
neutrality of in-between. The line for McDonalds wrapped around the corridor.
The line for ramen decidedly did not. Everything expressed in dollars and yen,
translations and generics. An over-cartoonish group of fake traditional
musicians walked around and played, posing for pictures. Why? Why advertise
their local performance to the detached dwellers of the airport food court? It
was amazingly surreal.
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Narita airport performers. |
If you are
keeping track of the places you have visited, stopovers accrued during travel don’t
count. You aren’t really there, you don’t really exist. I can’t really say I’ve
been to Jakarta, though I’m typing now waiting in a Jakarta terminal. I slept last
night in a hotel inside the Jakarta airport. I walked the outside drop-off area
this morning and sat at a Jakarta fountain overlooking the Jakarta parking lot
and a lawn of forbidden Jakarta grass and palm trees.
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Jakarta 1am shuttle-bus view. |
It doesn’t
count because for me and my fellow travelers- unlike the airport itself, its
workers, its amenities and its plantlife- real life doesn’t happen at any of
these places. I am in Jakarta but I am not. This is in-between for me and so I
am also in-between. Quintessentially, I took a shuttle bus last night from my
arrival terminal to the terminal my hotel was in. I mentioned my destination to
the driver, who told me to get in. I found, after a period of time that could
as easily have been ten or thirty minutes, that I had been brought to the same
place I had been originally. A round trip in non-space and outside of time. It’s
such an appealing wormhole, assuming you’re not really that worried about
actually getting anywhere.
Someone
told me once that jetlag is your soul catching up with your body. I really like
this idea. That there is a part of you that just can’t travel as fast as a tin
can hurtling through space and that you have to live like a partial zombie for
a bit while it finds you. If this is the case with jet lag, I like to think of
this extra secret lost time as recuperation for the mind, slowing down after
too much mundane regular action and buzzing activity. Your mind catching up
with your body after too much everyday, and before or after the stimulation and
expectation upon arrival.
Perhaps
getting lost in time is another built-in catch-up with yourself, your everyday
self catching up with the moment.
In any
case, it is delicious.