Archive for June 9th, 2011

Return to base

The flight from Atlanta to Dubai was once again endless even though I had many hours of sleep in my comfy B-class pod and, when not asleep, had innumerable things to keep me occupied and forget about time. Still, Dubai is far away from home – eight time zones; my sense of night and day is all messed up.

It took me from Boston to Atlanta and another hour into the next leg to unravel the cross stitches that I had spent several days on in Manchester and Vermont. If you are off by one thread at the start nothing can fix it other than starting over again. It’s the same with flying – if you are one degree off at the beginning of the journey and stay the course you may end up in Moscow rather than Dubai.

During our visit to Sita’s house I was reminded that her colors are not quite the pastel palette I had started with. The new start allowed me to use the proper palette this time: variations on red and pink. It will be a Quaker sampler with a Sita twist this time.

I am very happy with my netbook purchase. In order to leave Axel with my Kindle I downloaded a neat little program along with the Kindle software that turned my netbook into a Kindle, even letting me read the screen vertically – I hold the netbook like a book, it’s about the right size and weight. There is another piece of software that would even turn the screen into a Kindle look-alike, saving much battery power, but that requires more research.

Dubai is the best airport for single female travelers. Upon leaving the airport a row of pink taxis, with female drivers, also dressed in a pink outfit, a pink cap and a white veil are on standby to pick up people like me. All these female drivers appear to be Philippina. They chat in Tagalog with callers on their blue tooth cellphone, the blue light of their headset blinking through the white veil as if they are robots receiving instructions from outer space.

This time I picked a hotel in back of the Emirates Mall as part of my exploration of good deals among the thousands of hotels that dot the Dubai landscape. The hotel has the grandiose name of Grandeur Hotel. It is quite new and thus has some teething problems like not having a bottle opener for my Heineken or a scale to weigh my luggage. I learned that all loose things are stolen by clients. I had to leave an 80 dollar deposit for that reason I suspect.

Blessed after all

There was the illusion of having a good part of today but a 4 PM departure from Logan meant that the entire morning was dominated by the trip back to Kabul.

We were able to squeeze in a long walk on the Masconomo loop. Lobster Cove and the area around it was it its very best with all the rhododendrons at their peak. Unfortunately the leisurely lobster lunch overlooking the cove fell by the way side – not enough time.

I am returning with a suitcase full of books, teas, pills and a very old family rug that needs some repairs. Afghanistan seems like the right place for this task. I suspect I am one of very few people who fly into Afghanistan with a carpet.

I am sitting now at Hatfield (Atlanta) airport watching planes come and go while I count my blessings. I am grateful for the last two weeks and everyone who helped make them unforgettable: Axel, the kids, Steve for working his butt off so we can vacation in Vermont for three glorious days, Sally for our flight over Essex, our friends who treated us to many wonderful dinners. This leave was actually a real vacation – something I had not expected.

I am starting to turn the page and prepare myself for work again and feel confident that I can make my last four months of living in Afghanistan productive, interesting and manageable.


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