Ok. So I’m in the
Atlanta airport, having been in airport halls for 9 hours. A “mechanical difficulty” on the original
plane had 145 passengers scrambling for stand by spots on other flights. I’ve arrived in time to be a stand-bys…the
last flight that will get me to my destination in time to have some of this day
there. I am not successful – just two
seats away. The day, as I would have had
it, is busted, by no fault of my own. I
have a quick cry, easy tears, and a phone call to commiserate.
Moment felt. Moment
done. Nothing to do about it. Soften my focus.
So I take a walk in the terminal, having three hours to
“kill” when I realize this is a wonderful opportunity to train as a grace
operative. This is where the rubber
meets the road, when all my plans are bust and I am given the territory of the
present moment.
So I walk, with my carry-ons of course, down the long
concourse of the “D” gate. I breathe, I
take in, I let myself not know where I am going and become a passenger in my own
journey.
Walking teachers abound in front of me. I begin to imitate body spirirts as they pass
me by. A saunter that feels good, like a
moving “hang”, arms easy on the side with a slight legato transfer of
feet. Then short steps, creating tight
hips and a keen sense of people rushing people by. Next a thrusting walk, heal first, setting my weight in my hips. I’m self- conscious at first, until I realize
no one is noticing. I can walk
differently every moment. I am free in
my anonymity. I am fed by our shared
presence.
Body parts are favored,
affecting the flow: the placement of a chin, the angle of hip, the
thrust of a chest, the position of shoulders.
Feet add percussion and a rhythm to the walk. A woman swerves left in a perfect arc. I mirror the swerve to a water fountain. A perfect dance noticed only by me. But who needs an audience when grace abounds?
Back to the walk and the abundance of moves, each inviting a
different way of navigating. A wheel
chair swirls in front – smooth, weaving energy.
Children work their carry-ons in fluid play. High heels bounce. Tightly held bodies keep a shape even while
moving.
There is play everywhere.
There is grace everywhere. There
is fullness everywhere. I catch the eye
of another sojourner. “Enjoy your day,”
I offer. “Thank you,” came the reply, “you
too.” And you know what? I will.
Amen.
When I have a long airport delay, I always tell myself any day in aviation when I'm not on CNN is a good day in aviation.
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