In preparation for my departure from Seattle to New York
today, I decided to discuss my flight and how early I should arrive to the
airport with a couple of family members.
I am the kind of person who likes to get to the airport two hours early,
take my sweet time checking bags and walking through security, and I usually
even have time to buy a water bottle and sit down by my gate for a few
minutes. That time and leisure is something
I actually really enjoy about the airport, and it’s probably why I generally
have positive flight experiences. The
family members I chose to speak with, however, feel strongly that time spent past
security is wasted time. I don’t usually
change things like airport timeliness just because suggests that I do, but for
some reason I was in a welcoming mood when I had this discussion so I decided
that I would try it their way for my flight this morning because they were so
incredibly sure that an hour was plenty of time to even be bored for a little
while on the other side of security.
Flight time: 6:00 AM.
Time I would get to the airport: 4:15 AM.
Their suggested arrival time to the airport: 5:00 AM.
I knew that my task would be harder than they so
reassuringly suggested when it was 5:05 and I still wasn’t inside the airport
because of the backed up traffic into the Departures section. I calmed down, though, because my Mom decided
to drop me off at Arrivals and I would just take the elevator to the Departures
section… And so I did. When I turned the
corner from the elevator and saw the Southwest Airlines baggage check-in line,
I pretty much lost hope instantaneously.
There were hundreds of people standing in double or triple the roped
lines they usually have, and the line actually extended around the corner of
the entire check-in place to the security area (for those of you who have been
to Sea-Tac, that will be easier to understand).
Basically, though, I figured that hundreds of people in line + 45
minutes until take off ≠ me on the plane.
So instead of waiting in line, I went to the Business Priority section,
which had about three people in it, and said to the guy at the counter, “My
flight is in 40 minutes, any way you could check me in here?” to which he
responded, “I’m not going to check you in just because you came late to the
airport. Go wait in line like everyone
else!” Obviously I didn’t follow his advice, so instead I tried to go to the
outside baggage check area. Sadly, there
were about one hundred people in line there too and time was only ticking
away.
I’m pretty sure this is when I started crying, but it might
have been a minute or two before or after.
I approached the baggage checker and repeated the same question to him
except words were separated by breaths and tears. He responded by saying, “I can’t let you cut
the whole line, but if these people in the front section let you go ahead of
them that’s fine by me.” I barely even
said two words to the group of people (mostly because the crying made it hard
to speak) when they told me to go ahead of them (I love Seattleites!!!). The guy started checking me in, and in the
middle of speech about how I made the baggage check cutoff time by two minutes
and I need to be more careful, he told me that as long as my bags were only 50
lbs each I would be fine. I really didn’t
have time to go through that whole weighing process, so I started crying again
and said, “I’ve weighed them each many times and this one is 47 and this one is
46” (that wasn’t totally true, by the way).
I don’t know if it was the tears or his seemingly trusting personality
that got him, but he just put the bags on the belt and sent me on my way
telling me to run.
I definitely sprinted towards security, because I realized
that the time was now approximately 5:33.
Good thing there were hundreds and hundreds of people in all of the
different security lines! I decided to ask a TSA woman if she could help me get
through faster, and she said that only the airline people have the ability to
do that so I needed to ask them. And so
I ran… back to the Southwest counter.
When I asked a woman there what to do she said, “If I help you, I’ll
have to help everyone. You’re going to have to wait in line, miss your flight,
and catch the next one. Good luck!”
She’s clearly not from Seattle.
I sprinted back to security, and after asking a different TSA
woman for help and receiving the same response from her I decided that I had to
give up and hope for the best with the next flight. Luckily, I happened to be behind the woman
who let me cut her and her family to check my baggage… She saw that I was still
crying and distraught and asked if I had asked anyone for help, then suggested
that I try the Priority Lane person instead.
I gave her a wave of thanks, and sprinted as fast as I could toward the
new TSA woman. I’m pretty sure the only
words I managed to get out of my mouth were “flight” and “twenty minutes,” and
she let me through.
From Seattle.
There were only about thirty people in this security line,
but I still was by no means confident that I’d make it through. Luckily, they opened a new lane just when I
got there so I became fourth in line after this woman let me cut her because of
my distress. When I walked through the
metal detector thing it of course beeped.
I didn’t really understand why, though, because I had taken off things
that don’t even cause the beeping. Then
the TSA man screamed, “random screening!” Of course I had to be the lucky soul
to give TSA data which I didn’t have time to share. I told him that my flight was in fifteen
minutes, and instead of caring he just told me that he would take all of my
belongings for me to the separated table area.
Thanks, sir.
After he wiped my hands with something weird, I just grabbed
my things without putting them back into my bag, and RAN. Good thing the B gate is on the totally opposite
side of the airport! Sprinting and
crying is what I did for approximately seven minutes. Sprint. Cry. Sprint. Cry. Sprint. Cry. Over and over. When I got towards the end of the journey,
feel hot and start to sweat became a part of that cycle as well- how
lovely.
Thank Gd I ended up making it to the gate just as they were
finishing up boarding- even if I was a teary-eyed and slightly sweaty
mess. The one positive thing I’ll say is
how awesome it was to be in such good shape from boxing that the 45 minutes of
off and on sprinting barely even made me sweat.
In terms of timeliness to the airport, I’m 100% positive
that I’ll never try the one hour before thing again, but maybe I can find a
little bit of a middle ground between that and my usual two hours… No promises,
though.
oy poor Julia! I am so sorry you had to go through that.
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