Airport Survival Guide: Cry Quietly and Carry On

The airport. A monument to mankind’s ability to take something majestic—flight, freedom, the sheer glory of defying gravity—and turn it into a sort of bureaucratic cattle prod run by people who think “urgent” is a type of seasoning.

Let’s start with getting there. You set off three hours early, because apparently, even though your flight is at midday, the airport functions on some kind of feral squirrel logic where time is optional and panic is mandatory. You arrive, of course, only to be herded into a line that appears to have been designed by a sleep-deprived raccoon with a grudge against geometry.

Security. Ah yes. That cheerful gauntlet of latex gloves and unblinking suspicion. You remove your shoes like a naughty schoolboy, strip your belt off like you’re auditioning for a low-budget Magic Mike sequel, and then awkwardly shuffle forward, holding your pants up with one hand while trying to explain to a man with a badge and a thousand-yard stare that yes, your toothpaste is indeed less than 100ml, and no, you are not planning to hijack the flight using dental hygiene products.

Then the scan. You step into a machine that looks like it was stolen from Star Trek but functions like it was built by a guy named Bob in his garden shed. It beeps. Why? Nobody knows. Could be a zipper. Could be your soul crying out. Out comes the glove. There goes your dignity.

And then… the gate. A vast, existentially bleak arena filled with people who have absolutely had it. You’ve got Karen from Duluth loudly explaining to her mother that her flight was supposed to leave yesterday, a man eating what looks like a lasagna out of a plastic bag, and three guys in matching tank tops clearly going to Cancun to commit crimes against sobriety and public decency.

Now you encounter the flight attendant who, for reasons known only to the dark gods of budget airlines and polyester, is already upset and barking instructions like someone who’s just learned about volume and is determined to test it. They begin exercising what can only be described as power tripping—minuscule power… largely just tripping. It’s like giving a traffic cone a badge and telling it it’s in charge of morale. These are the sort of people who say things like, “You need to comply,” and “Sir, that’s not allowed,” as though they were enforcing international law and not just telling you to stow a neck pillow. “Oh you shouldn’t explain to me your point,” they say, “because I am the point itself!” Makes your head explode.

Boarding begins. By which I mean: boarding is announced, and suddenly everyone becomes a contestant in a game show called “Get to the Gate First or Die Trying.” Never mind that you’re in Group 9. Never mind that the plane is still being fueled by, you guessed it, Bob himself who is visibly asleep next to a fuel truck. No, you’re all-in on this race, elbowing pensioners and knocking over toddlers like you’re storming the beaches of Normandy.

Once on board, you find your seat—which is now legally classified as “compact torture.” You wedge yourself in, knees under your chin, elbows tucked like you’re playing hide-and-seek with your own armpits, and try to make peace with the fact that you paid several hundred dollars to be this uncomfortable.

But just as you start to relax, thinking perhaps—just perhaps—this won’t be so bad, someone opens a tuna sandwich. Someone always opens a tuna sandwich. And now the cabin smells like Poseidon’s butt crack and there’s nothing to be done. You are trapped in a pressurized tin can at 35,000 feet with a fishmonger’s picnic.

And in between all this, let’s not forget the joy of the connecting flight dash. You’ve landed late, obviously, because why not, and now you’ve got 14 minutes to make it from Gate A1 to Gate Z99, which—according to airport signage—is “just a short walk through purgatory.” So you run. You sprint like a man whose pants are on fire, weaving between luggage and spilled pretzels, only to be thwarted by a wall of people moving at the speed of continental drift. These aren’t travelers. These are zombies in yoga pants, pondering their life choices. You scream internally as they block your path like sentient speed bumps.

Then comes the BLEEP. BLEEP. BLEEP. That’s not help arriving. That’s the electric transport cart driven by a man named Walt who last smiled in 1972. It’s going 5 miles an hour and somehow still managing to mow down everything in its path like a mobility scooter possessed by a mad badger.

You think, “Maybe I’ll stop for water.” Ha. Hudson News awaits. You walk in and discover a single bottle of Dasani costs more than your childhood home, and a Snickers bar is priced like a rare antique. You spend eleven dollars and feel like you’ve been mugged by someone wearing a name badge and khakis.

The signs don’t help. Arrows point in all directions—some up, some down, one appears to be guiding you to an alternate dimension. You’re trying to find Gate B12 but have somehow ended up next to a massage chair, a shoeshine stand, and a man singing “Sweet Caroline” into a karaoke machine in what appears to be an Applebee’s with gates.

And then—dear Lord—the outfits. It’s not “airport fashion,” it’s “3 a.m. gas station chaos.” Pyjamas everywhere: crusty Spongebob bottoms, flannel nightmares, and one guy in a dressing gown and Crocs who looked like he’d escaped group therapy mid-session. A teenager strutted by in what was essentially a fishing net, while a woman in full sequins and six-inch heels stormed past like 1994 Claudia Schiffer on a mission—right into Gate C17, which, as it turns out, wasn’t a gate at all, just a broken vending machine and a man crying quietly into a Cinnabon.

And, inevitably, lurking nearby, is the old pervert. Beige trousers. Suspiciously long loitering time. Holding a newspaper that’s upside-down. Watching Claudia 2.0 with the intensity of a hawk that’s just spotted a mouse… or a restraining order.

Welcome to the airport. A place where humanity goes to be tested, teased, and slowly broken by overpriced gum, gate changes, and the slow, agonizing death of common sense.

Air travel, ladies and gentlemen. The dream of Da Vinci, realized by Spirit Airlines.


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71 responses to “Airport Survival Guide: Cry Quietly and Carry On”

  1. Sarada Gray Avatar
    Sarada Gray

    I don’t fly any more because of climate change. But I guess in the US it’s hard to get around any other way

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Yes coz the country is so vast. It’ll take days of driving to get from Virginia to California (and more fuel environmental cost). Trains could be an option but again, it takes days to traverse that distance and the cost of it is more than double that of an airline’s.

      Like

    2.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Thanks for showcasing the anticapitalist perspective on travel, mentioning climate change as a valid reason to end your travels!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. mjeanpike Avatar

    I have not flown since the 90’s. Now I remember why, lol. Great post!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊

      Like

  3. CJ Antichow Avatar
    CJ Antichow

    Sooooo funny! And bang on lol

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊

      Liked by 1 person

  4. tidalscribe.com Avatar

    When I worked at Heathrow in my humble position making coffee in the business lounges, our actual job was soothing passengers nerves and offering counselling for all the trauma they had suffered – and that was before they had even got near a plane. One day I was walking through the large crowded departure lounge on my way to the magic staff exit that led back to landside, when I saw a distressed woman addressing a young man in uniform, a uniform that had nothing to do with passenger care. ‘I just can’t cope any more!’

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Wow I didn’t know that there are airport staffs whose job are to soothe passengers’ nerves. But that may just be in Britain, in the US they just call the police. ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Kathy Simmons Avatar

    I find airports and flying in general, depressing and tiresome. The means to an end only.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      If only there’s another viable option ☺️.

      Liked by 1 person

      1.  Avatar
        Anonymous

        The only viable option is any option that does not include privatized forms of transportation. I am a staunch believer in public modes being the only valid modes of transportation for ethical merit.

        Liked by 1 person

  6. michael raven Avatar

    *please let my flight later this summer be uneventful please let my flight later this summer be uneventful please let —*

    Everything in the above post is true, folks… Every single letter.

    And I am not looking forward to reliving the experience.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      ☺️ Thanks!

      Liked by 1 person

      1.  Avatar
        Anonymous

        sure uneventful flights can be rare in some places

        Liked by 1 person

  7. Kristi Avatar

    Love your sense of humor on display here. The analogies are so witty and perfect. Thank you for the laugh out loud!!! Bravo. 👏

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊.

      Like

      1.  Avatar
        Anonymous

        interesting

        Liked by 1 person

  8. curating happy Avatar

    It’s time to bring back the era of the dirigible. Elegant, spacious, and if anyone hijacks it there’s sooo muuuch time to clear out the targets. Seriously, people at the World Trade Center would have been able to finish the work day and take the stairs to the parking lot. Hell, the dirigible probably would have just bounced off.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      That’s a great idea. If only they can find a replacement for Helium ☺️.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. spwilcen Avatar

        Political hot air.

        Liked by 1 person

  9. wrangalottapus Avatar

    So many funny observations and objective interpretationd that I can’t find one to highlight. I chuckled all the way through!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊

      Like

  10. Mary K. Doyle Avatar

    You made me laugh as I kept nodding my head in agreement.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊

      Like

  11. denvrital Avatar

    Great Story… if you were traveling in or out of Denver Intl. Airport… your story would be 3 times as long and 5 times more frustrating. DIA is undoubtably large… take 36 football fields and stick them all together with a “to gate” train that is usually overly full… with people jammed in like sardines and breaks down more often than a teen ager at her first boy/girl dance. Security is a nightmare in as much as people bring their own mini folding chairs to use while stuffed into a 1/4 mile long winding path with 2 foot wide stanchions every 5 feet. You are close enough to your fellow traveler that you can guess what brand toothpaste they used that morning. Once you conquer that mess… you take the moving sidewalk towards your gate… which is also so long that there are Burma-Shave road signs posted along the entire route. Just make sure you ate something before arriving at DIA… everything including a McFish sandwich is so expensive you might have to take out a second mortgage just to have lunch. Bon Voyage!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      I’ve never been to DIA, now I can’t decide if I’ll avoid it or see that chaos! 😂. Thanks for sharing your story. 😊

      Like

  12. joannerambling Avatar

    This had me laughing from the get go, for that I thanks you.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊

      Like

  13. midwife.mother.me. Avatar

    loved this! I was inspired to rant about airport security last summer. http://midwifemotherme.com/2024/07/09/airport-security/

    I still fly. Regularly. I experience an unhealthy combination of guilt and rage. It’s not good. But flying is, like, the best, the most miraculous, the most convenient thing ever. So bring on the grage!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      That’s true, ☺️. I’m gonna read your article about it ☺️. Thank you for sharing!

      Liked by 1 person

  14. […] Airport Survival Guide: Cry Quietly and Carry On […]

    Liked by 1 person

  15. williamrablan Avatar

    That’s hysterical! thanks for the laugh.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thank you 😊

      Like

  16. hellosamanthadear Avatar

    “Poseidon’s butt crack” – LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    This was an absolutely HILARIOUS read and it made my day! As someone who has never flown even once in my entire life, it sounds like a totally scary experience – I’d probably end up in tears trying to navigate airport life. I guess it’s a good thing I’ll never travel? 🥲

    Thanks for the good laugh! ❤️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊

      Liked by 1 person

  17.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    I’ve been in aviation since I started flying at age 16, and you wrote a very accurate description of our controlled chaos called aviation. Funny, too! BTW… you haven’t lived until you’ve had a stale tuna sandwich from an airport vending machine at 3 am… Yeah, I’m one of those guys! 😂 Great work!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks Captain ☺️.

      Like

  18. Helen Devries Avatar
    Helen Devries

    How true!

    Mark you, substitute an egg and cress sandwich for the tuna one if you want a real miasma…especially when it has been warming up for hours going through security.

    Liked by 1 person

  19. spwilcen Avatar

    Ah! Air travel in the 60s. Brawny-sized “blankets” for each passenger. A deck of playing cards. Smoking, no smoking signs. On some flights, no joke, a five-pack of cigarettes. Stewardesses. Assigned seats. TSA didn’t exist. You could waltz your loved-one of your Mother-in-law to the boarding door. Crying babies traveled in cargo with Biff, the non-therapy dog. You checked your bags, Peanuts were on the snack list. Men traveled in suits, women in dresses. Flip-flops and crocks were left behind and rotted on the beach. Kiosks were non-existent. The sandwiches Aunt Martha packed for you r flight were allowed. A six-four drunk never argued a third vodka with a Playboy Stewardess. Snot nosed pre-teens were promptly slapped stupid by their parents. Ah. Air travel is so-o-o-o much better now.

    Liked by 2 people

  20.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    awesome

    Liked by 1 person

  21. David Avatar

    My ultimate airline stress is trying to get my Chinese wife with limited ability to read signs in English (well it is her 3rd language so I can’t blame her), onto the flight when she believes traffic delays won’t happen, that the luggage check-in time is when it opens, not when it closes and that needing to be through security and at the gate more than 5 minutes before boarding closes is a crime against time itself.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      ☺️. Signs can get confusing especially if there are a lot of them in one group.

      Like

  22. gfyfleur Avatar

    this was a hoot and a half tbh (but sososososo accurate). thanks for the laugh and this was fantastic 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks ☺️

      Like

  23. Lynette d'Arty-Cross Avatar

    As a pilot (mostly retired now) I didn’t know whether to cringe, laugh or cry at your completely accurate descriptions of airports/flying. I’ve seen all kinds of different ones all over the world but they’re all the same, too. Great post.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks Captain ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

  24. Klausbernd Avatar

    We absolutely liked your text – and it’s even worse. Therefore, we rather stay at home than travel. Travel has not only lost its magic it has turned to Purgatorio.
    Thanks
    The Fab Four of Cley
    🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks Klaus, Mr. Fab Four ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Klausbernd Avatar

        We are four people blogging together:
        Klausbernd, Hanne-Dina and our two Bookfayries Siri and Selma.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. AKings Avatar

        Oh, hello everyone ☺️. I’m so glad you enjoyed my little article. I really appreciate it! Thank you!

        Like

  25. Jessica Moore Wilson Avatar

    That about sums it up. My husband uses a wheelchair – you should see how handsy TSA can get with him. Since he’s all metal, he can’t go through the scanner, and needs a very personalized search. It’s pretty unsettling.

    He calls this experience, and others like it, the “ensh!tification” of everything.

    Happy travels!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Wish they can do something better than that. Makes you wonder, with all the technology available these days.

      Liked by 1 person

  26. Kai Reinhardt Avatar

    I’m going to quit travel blogging altogether because of you, kind sir, and your fine, funny words. This is it – the pinnacle of human travel literature. It simply can’t get any better.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      😂- I hope you’re not gonna quit. I’m sure your versions are much better.

      Like

  27. Barb Avatar

    This is so funny, but true! I love how you make light of the world’s madness. 💝

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks Barb ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

  28. Jacqui Murray Avatar

    I’ll compare notes on my next trip in September. I’m not looking forward to it.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      You’ll be alright Jackie ☺️.

      Liked by 1 person

  29. Bronlima Avatar

    Valencia to Madrid – 300 km. Train – up to 300kph – trip takes only two hours. No waiting, just get on… and off. Hours quicker than flght…. and cheaper too.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Sadly, we don’t have that kind of infrastructure in the states.

      Liked by 1 person

  30. Cadeegirl Gee Avatar

    Lol Why am I able to relate to it all? 😅🤣😂 I mean all of it. Thanks for the laugh.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

  31. veerites Avatar

    Dear King, it’s a fantastic post, awakening souls long asleep. Thanks for liking my post Monsoon 🙏

    Liked by 2 people

  32. ibarynt Avatar

    I got a good laugh 🤣🤣

    Liked by 2 people

  33. browney237 Avatar

    I did chuckle as I read this. So many experiences I could relate too. One you missed was the challenge of stowing carry on. It always makes me laugh.

    Liked by 3 people

  34. Samuel Armah Avatar

    Even today , in 2025 .I recently caught myself still staring at an aeroplane few days ago and wondering how we humans figured out how to lift this heavy metal up in the air and move it forward.

    Liked by 2 people

  35. tenzenmen Avatar

    Fabulous write. You have a keen eye for interesting phrases.

    Liked by 2 people

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