12/06/2012

My Other Half...


So it happened that I had flown up to Boston. With the help of faithful friends with whom I had kept a warm communication prior to my departure for training and Kansas City, kind friends who were still struggling in their studies at Harvard, I had found a respite. Once more, I had been offered the breathing space I needed, thus postponing the making of an important decision.

As I had clearly exposed my present living situation, stressing upon this hopeless dilemma but, at the same time, offering a clear, logical and practical solution, it hadn’t been difficult to observe that my point had been made. I had argued strongly in my favour.
Hugs and smiles and excited responses sealed our agreement.
I had been accepted as a new lodger, even better a French female roommate at that.

 You see, my monthly runs were still too packed with a three-day round- trip schedule, five times a month, with three days off in between, to even contemplate the prospects of a totally independent life.
So for the moment, this would have to do.
However it had greater advantages than in New York.  Commuting to Boston on TWA was virtually so cheap to almost nothing that it had been a smart move, I thought, while accruing seniority which would allow me choose more attractive time table.

I had been given my own room, my little private corner, in a spacious four bedroom apartment, sharing with three male students.
There were rules of course and equal for all. However I had absolutely no obligations as far as housekeeping was concerned. And each had own shelf in the refrigerator, and responsible for own keep.
We were all deeply busy with either studies or job to think about anything else.
Social life was meeting friends at a coffee shop, a café, or around the vast campus of Harvard if time permitted it. And there were many places to choose from.
If the boys wanted a party, they could always arrange one while I was away. They probably did too but I never heard of them.

I had been flying some eight months now and the nagging feeling of wanting more of “something” was impatiently pulling at me. This urge or lust or ambition to be in charge was becoming powerfully dominant.

Applying for the Purser position was therefore the natural consequence. The easiest at that as well. To qualify, one needed two foreign languages in addition to English.
I already could speak French fluently. When I presented myself for the test in Spanish, and the instructor asked how I was in that language, I retorted directly and rapidly in the tongue of Cervantes without the slightest hesitation. He nodded his approval, admitting that he himself didn’t understand a word I had said but understood it was Spanish.
That was the strangest test I have ever taken though…
Reciting by heart Frederico Garcia Lorca‘s “ Antonio Torres Heredia “ in a fluent Spanish but miming the text with the appropriate interjections or stops as if I was demonstrating a totally different situation – by the way, my best performance ever !

I had joined the first class of TWA female pursers, with the lowest seniority in the flying club and of age the youngest of my group.
Boarding my first flight as a purser, not long after the completion of probation as a hostess, I had faced an experienced cabin crew with twenty years as hostesses.
My heart had pounded its invisible tune of excitement.
I was the Boss.
Second after the Captain!

Although there had been grumbling comments voiced by some macho cockpit crews at the very beginning, I had quickly mastered those to make them disappear. Realizing that, as a woman, in order to gain respect and achieve recognition, I had to work the double of what my male colleagues did.

On my uniform jacket, shining brightly, both wings had been one.
My Other Half had been born.

From there on, I knew I would reach new heights as leader of the bird flock…at the service of flight crews and for an exceptional travel experience to our passengers.
So stay tuned as the making of a world filled with delightful adventures is about to begin.

Get your wingy gear ready to fly with me.
Forget about your " carry-on " hand luggage as there is no room for it on my 707 Boeing aircraft...
                                                
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" A traveller without observation is a bird without wings.
                                                          Moslih Eddin Saadi






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