On the road again (blog version)

On the road again
Goin’ places that I’ve never been
Seein’ things that I may never see again
And I can’t wait to get on the road again

Sacramento International Airport

I added a journal entry yesterday, about the start of my trip to Colorado, with most of it written in the Sacramento airport or on the plane. Given my current state of mind, it was fairly sad and a bit depressing until I had a second glass of wine on the plane. I kept the finished product in the Journal, but there were enough portions that were not depressing, and mostly related to travel, so with a bit of editing, made for a worthwhile post on the travel blog. So here goes.

This is sort of a live stream post, since almost all of it was initially written on the way from Sacramento to Denver. Of course I’m posting it the next day, but you get my drift.  At any rate, I was lamenting in my journal entry, about how returning to Colorado can be a somewhat melancholy experience – we lived there off and on for 43 years, starting in 1979.  There are not a heck of a lot of places in Colorado that Jan and I had not already visited – it’s sort of like going to Capitola or Carmel on steroids. We moved to Colorado in 1978, back when Denver really was a cow town. There was virtually no development between where we initially lived and Boulder, and there were virtually no stop signs or traffic lights near us. Now, the corridor between Denver and Boulder is completely developed. Jammed is more like it. We traveled in the mountains most every weekend, skiing all winter, and just taking drives in the summer to mountain towns. Back then, you could drive to Vail and back for the day without traffic jams. Much to our Irish Setter’s chagrin – Clancy never wanted to leave home – a true couch potato. Through the years, Jan and I traveled I-25 from Fort Collins (from Wyoming actually) to New Mexico, and have been to most every mountain town. And I have memories of all of these.

Colorado is just full of memories of Jan, and all the things we did together for most of our married lives. Heck, even landing at the airport (DIA) brings back recent memories – traveling to Denver when we were house hunting 5 years ago, or using Find My Device to search for the iPad she left behind once (we found it!), or the time we both traveled back from our consulting jobs, from different coasts, and met at the airport after Jan was layed-off. Jan was really down in the dumps, but I met her with flowers and a bottle of champagne. So many memories.

So I wrote most of this on the plane, which is not too bright when the memories put you on the edge of breaking into tears. This happens a lot to me – writing about Jan reminds me of yet another Jack Nicholson movie (I really like his movies), “Something’s Gotta Give”, where Diane Keaton is a play writer, and she writes about her relationship with his character, sobbing the entire time. Well, that’s me sometimes when I write my journal entries. I took a deep breath, and closed the iPad. Dinner was about to show up, a good time for a break and a glass of wine. And to switch back to travel talk

During my years of IT consulting, I traveled most every week, always on United, and accrued enough miles to reach the lofty 1K level of the Mileage Plus program. At that point, I was upgraded to first class on most every trip, sometimes without requesting it. That was great except for one time when I was traveling with Jan, and they bumped me to first class. Uh….but what about Jan. She wound up sitting at the bulkhead between coach and first class, so we were only a few rows apart….but miles apart in service. I was sitting next to a United pilot who was dead-heading back to Denver. When he found out Jan was sitting in coach, he spread the word to the other pilots sitting there, and to the flight crew. It was not a pleasant flight for me – the pilots kept up a conversation with Jan the entire trip, with a lot of jokes at my expense. But they were nice enough to serve Jan first class food and beverages, so it worked out OK. 

As we started to travel overseas, Jan quickly came to the conclusion that it was not worth suffering in coach, especially after a couple of really awful flights on Aer Lingus and Italia airlines. From that point forward, she said we will only fly business or first – it’s worth it. I agreed. Now that I’m traveling alone, I’m still all in on upgrading, especially for those long flights to far away places. Even on short flights like the one to Denver. Getting back to dinner on this flight, I had made a choice a few days before – there were the usual choices of salads, some type of chicken dish, a vegetarian pasta, a cheese plate, and something unhealthy but interesting – a Beef Melt sandwich. Why not – I’m tired of always being healthy. Bad choice – I did not notice the description of the toxic mix of pepper they hid under the cheese. At least the dessert and wine were OK.

Melted Beef Sandwich. Blah

So, after a glass of wine at the airport (Vino Volo) and a glass on the plane, my overall mood had improved even with the overly spiced sandwich. The flight got off late, but magically landed on time so all I had to do was negotiate getting to the main terminal, finding my baggage, catching a shuttle for the car rental,  and then drive to Aurora to my friends’ place. Phew. DIA has always been difficult compared to some other airports, to find your way between gates, terminals and baggage carousels and with the seemingly never ending multi-year construction project, it is worse than ever. Terminal A, where we landed had the options of taking the always overcrowded train to the main terminal, or take a 10 mile circuitous walk to the baggage area. I decided that I needed to stretch my legs, so opted for the walkway. Fortunately, there were moving walkways which made my aching legs happy, and some “interesting” display along the way.

I’m not sure this is what passengers want to see coming or going. Not exactly an inviting greeting for visitors to Colorado. Whatever.

So, I made it safely to my friends’ house, and this first day will be all about acclimatization to being mile high again (altitude, not that other thing). Maybe I’ll take a long walk to get used to the lack of O2, and just relax, read a book, work on my blog and book. I have some touristy things scheduled on Thursday, and the Incline on Sunday – other than that, I’ll find some other stuff to do. As my father-in-law used to say when he had no clue about a problem, “I’ll figure it out” (Jan and I adopted that phrase as well). 

Comments

One response to “On the road again (blog version)”

  1. Ann Avatar
    Ann

    ironically sitting in Sac airport waiting for flight to Denver while reading your blog. Only I won’t be getting out of the airport because it’s going to be a quick change to get on my flight to Munich. Enjoy your time with friends- I know the memories can be painful….but what wonderful memories they are!! Safe travels!

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