By a guy who once had his entire life cancelled by what could generously be described as decorative ice

There is, in modern life, no greater illusion than the belief that you are actually going somewhere.
You book the ticket months in advance. You plan. You coordinate. You inform relatives, rearrange work, mentally pack your bags, and—if you’re feeling particularly optimistic—check the weather forecast and think, “That seems fine.”
And then, somewhere over United States, a single snowflake falls.
Not a blizzard. Not a biblical, end-of-days white apocalypse. No. A snowflake. One. Possibly two, if we’re being dramatic.
And immediately, the entire aviation system collapses like a soufflé in a thunderstorm.
Flights cancelled. Delayed. Re-routed. Vanished entirely, as if they never existed. Departure boards flicker from “On Time” to “Delayed” to “Cancelled” with the sort of enthusiasm usually reserved for game shows. And there you are, standing in the terminal, holding a boarding pass that now has all the authority of a napkin.
Your plans—carefully constructed, delicately balanced—are now gone. Not postponed. Not adjusted. Gone. Swept away by frozen precipitation that, in any other context, would be considered festive.
And then begins the rebooking process.
Ah yes. Rebooking. The airline industry’s version of Dante’s Inferno.
You join a line that appears to have been designed by someone with a deep hatred of humanity. It snakes around barriers, past kiosks, through duty-free shops, and possibly into another time zone. By the time you reach the desk, you’ve aged. Not metaphorically. Physically.
And there, behind the counter, stands the gate agent.
Arms crossed. Expression set to “deeply unimpressed.” Already annoyed. Already exhausted. Already radiating the sort of energy that says, “Whatever your problem is, I assure you, I do not care.”
You haven’t even spoken yet.
“I can’t do anything about it,” she says.
Now, this is fascinating, because right behind her is a computer. A perfectly functional machine capable of rebooking flights, rerouting passengers, and generally solving the exact problem she claims is unsolvable. But no. That would require effort. Initiative. A flicker of customer service.
Instead, she has chosen a different path: becoming part of the problem.
It’s a bold strategy.
Meanwhile, passengers begin to unravel. A man in a business suit is whispering aggressively into his phone. A family of five is slowly realizing their vacation has turned into a sleepover on Terminal B’s carpet. A woman nearby is Googling “how to build shelter out of carry-on luggage.”
And somewhere in the distance, an announcement chimes in that cheerful, robotic tone:
“We apologize for the inconvenience.”
Do you? Do you really?
Because if you did, you might have a system that doesn’t collapse at the mere suggestion of winter.
Now, I remember a different time. The 1980s. When flying was an event. A civilized affair. You dressed up. You were treated like a person, not a suspicious package with shoes.
You walked through security without being psychologically evaluated by a man with a scanner and a deep mistrust of your belt. No one was confiscating your shampoo like it was a weapon of mass destruction. Your dignity remained largely intact.
Today, however, you are processed.
Shoes off. Belt off. Laptop out. Arms up. Stand there while a machine inspects your very soul. Somewhere along the line, air travel stopped being transportation and became a mildly invasive ritual.
And then, of course, there’s the seating.
Economy class. Or, as it is now affectionately known, “cattle class.”
Which tells you everything you need to know.
You are herded in. Packed tightly. Knees pressed against the seat in front of you like you’re auditioning for a role as a folded chair. The armrest becomes a battleground. The person behind you has decided your seatback is a percussion instrument.
And the airlines? They’ve embraced this. Fully. Openly. With enthusiasm.
Imagine this in any other business.
You walk into a restaurant.
“Ah yes, welcome. You’ll be dining in our cattle section today. Please squeeze in. Elbows are optional. Comfort is not included.”
Or a hotel.
“Here’s your room, sir. It’s slightly smaller than your suitcase, but we’ve priced it as if it overlooks the Mediterranean.”
You’d leave. Immediately. Possibly while shouting.
But at the airport? You accept it. Because what choice do you have? Swim?
And that’s the brilliance of it. Airlines have created a system so essential, so unavoidable, that they can treat you like an inconvenience in your own journey—and you’ll still come back.
Because you have to.
So there you are, stranded, slightly humiliated, financially bruised, clutching a rebooking confirmation that now has you departing three days later via a route that includes cities you didn’t even know existed.
All because of a snowflake.
And yet—despite the chaos, the indignity, the bureaucratic gymnastics—when they finally call your boarding group, you line up.
You shuffle forward.
You present your pass.
Because deep down, against all evidence, you still believe…
This time, it might actually work.
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