It's often noted
that the later stages of life come to resemble the early ones. The
cycle of life seems to hit its apex in the striving, self-important
years, then retirees come to resemble carefree adolescents before
succumbing to the vulnerability of the first stages of life. The
English phrase “losing one's marbles” is roughly equivalent to
becoming “rimbambito” in Italian, i.e. becoming a baby again.
Yes, we do sometimes revert to our earlier stages.
I've discovered some
of that symmetry in my own life cycle while traveling recently. My
very first foray into Europe was in my student years and in Italy I
found myself particularly vulnerable. I hitch-hiked my way from Nice
almost to Rome but having gotten to Viterbo at about 10:00 PM, I
decided to take a train for the last leg to Rome. Hitch-hiking is
not a very effective means of transport late at night on country
roads, especially in a country where you don't speak the language.
People were all very friendly, from the university students who
accompanied me to the Viterbo Station, to the man who accosted me
when I descended from the train at midnight in Rome's Termini
Station. Asking if I needed a cheap place to stay, this man, who
I'll call Aldo, because I seem to recall that was his name, said he
knew an inexpensive place to stay in someone's apartment but for the
night at hand, he knew a closer place only a little less cheap.
While suspicious, I did need a place to sleep and had no clue where
that might be, so I followed him to the first appartment and slept
there without incident. Aldo implausibly claimed to be a doctor who
just liked to help students and he showed up the next morning to
accompany me to the other place in a residential neighborhood south
of the center, stopping here and there for coffee, which he
generously paid for. He introduced me to the woman in whose
apartment I'd be staying, although she understood no more English
than I understood Italian. Aldo couldn't have been more helpful. He
suggested that if I really wanted to see all the sights in and around
Rome, it was essential that I rent a car, if only for a day. His
English was passable when he wanted to explain something but if
questioned, his English instantly faded to a memory. Despite some
apprehension, and no doubt due to the gullibility of youth, I
acquiesced to the pitch and soon we were sailing around the city in a
rented Fiat with Aldo at the wheel, looking a little like a bad copy
of Vittorio Gassman in Il Sorpasso.. We were joined by two of his
girlfriends for a ride out to Ostia. I failed to pursue the
opportunities presented there, which might well have found me
stranded naked in a pine grove, and we headed back to the city for
more sight-seeing, which extended to a night club in the wee hours.
As I reached the point of exhaustion, Aldo said fine, he'd take me
back to the apartment and then return to the club and he'd see me in
the morning. As you may have guessed, he didn't turn up the next
morning and when I hastily returned to the car rental place I was
told that everything was OK, “my friend” had returned the car and
taken the deposit. I was furious but in reality, he had shown me a
good time and served as a guide to Rome. I was fortunate. When I
returned to the apartment I discovered that two young American women
were also staying there and had been similarly ripped off by Aldo.
They had come with their own rental car loaded with gifts they'd
bought on their tour, but which their designated recipients would
never see. We spent the next few days dividing our time between
sight-seeing and looking for Aldo, vowing that if we saw him before
he saw us, we'd kill him. We never saw him again.
The apartment was OK
and seemed to fit my meager budget, but it wasn't as cheap as I'd
thought. If it was to have cost Lit.3,000 a night, it came to
something like Lit.7,000, because I'd taken a shower or a bath, and
possibly turned on some lights. Toto's wonderfully comic movies were
not made of fantasy. That's the way it was. Everything cost more
than it was said to cost. The price of a modest meal wasn't what you
planned because the cover charge and charges for bread, water and
service could double the bill. Taxis had surcharges for baggage,
round trips, holiday or nighttime service and for rate hikes that had
not yet been installed on the meter. I got out of the country with a
sigh of relief, escaping to the relaxed and secure atmosphere of
Germany, despite having been completely enchanted by the beauty of
the cities, the countryside and the women of Italy. The enchantment
remained and the nervousness abated over time to the point where I've
managed to live more than half my life very happily in Italy.
I've come to
understand the post-war Italian mindset. Times were tough. Food was
scarce and people learned or invented the tricks of survival. Once
learned, those tricks turned into habits which persisted even after
conditions had become notably better. The techniques of survival
were ably documented by masters of the Italian cinema such as Totò,
Gassman and Alberto Sordi.
Decades have passed
and again I live on a restricted budget, as in my student days.
Faced with the need to attend a family ceremony in London, I sought
an economic means of getting there. Despite all these years of
living in Italy, I am, for better and often for worse, still an
American, and what are our most deeply held values? Low prices and
convenience!! Closer to our hearts than mom, apple pie or the
Constitution! The Perugia airport is only fifty-five km from our
house and Ryanair offers seemingly the lowest prices to London, so
just as I followed Aldo to that bargain apartment, I booked us on
Ryanair.
Ryanair is operated
by an Irishman, Michael O'Leary. I have met many Irishmen in recent
years and have found them all to be unfailingly friendly, kind and
generous. I'm not counting those who escaped the potato famine to
become policemen in the USA. Their comportment is uniquely American.
Perhaps not all Irishmen are like the ones I know. After all, not
all Italians are like Aldo. Maybe only the best of Irishmen are
drawn to Italy. Some of the others, especially those of the Enron
generation, run airlines or banks Aldo managed to fleece three
tourists in two days. He was good at his vocation but Ryanair
processes thousands every day. What a shame that Alberto Sordi did
not live long enough to depict O’Leary in a film.
Ryanair did remind
me of those old days in Rome. The airfares they sold us seemed
reasonable
but we each needed
to bring along a suitcase, which nearly doubled the fare, not
altogether unreasonably since they occupied about as much space as we
did.. Always hoping to please my nervous wife, I opted for travel
insurance and on-line check-in, figuring that the latter would assure
us of assigned seats before getting to the airport. Not exactly!
The boarding pass did arrive via email a few days before departure.
An earlier statement from the airline said we could bring aboard a
stowable carry-on bag but it seems that when the privilege of
checking a bag is purchased, the carry-on privilege is rescinded.
Our seats were indeed assigned prior to our departure, middle seats
several rows apart. Recourse was available for nearly all
inconveniences. For a fee we could change our seats, with a number
of pricing options. There were enough other options available to run
the price up to that of a business class ticket but none which could
get you a seat suitable for average human dimensions. Of course, our
assigned seats were next to occupied seats so if we wanted to sit
together, we'd have to change both seats.
Once I'd paid the
fees for the new seats and the carry-on bag I realized that I'd have
to do this again for the return trip so I tried to check in for the
return flight before leaving home. The Ryanair website seemed to
work and I selected new seats and the carry-on option and proceeded
to the pay page to enter my data. Something failed and when I
returned to the site, it no longer acknowledged our reservation
number, adding a layer of apprehension to the frustration.
In London, another
try yielded a similar result, but three or four days prior to
departure we received an email with the usual diabolically selected
seats, which we managed to change, along with buying the carry-on
option.
Given that the
Ryanair flights leave at the crack of dawn from Stansted, which is
somewhere in the north of England, we decided to go there the night
before the flight and stay in the hotel attached to the airport.
That was uneventful except that the electronic key cards to the rooms
are apparently programmed to function only in the hands of British
subjects. Fortunately we found some helpful Brits. As an architect,
I like the Stansted Airport, with its light, airy roof and sense of
open space. Unfortunately, the interior circulation was apparently
not entrusted to the designer of the building. My guess is that it
was done by Michael O'Leary himself. If there was any consultant
involved, it would have to have been a moonlighting Gina Haspel, or
someone of similar tendencies and experience. Normal people want to
get from the airport entrance to their plane as quickly and simply as
possible. Current security concerns do create an unwanted obstacle
but beyond that, the passengers' needs are basically having a toilet,
a newsstand and a cup of coffee with which to ingest their
tranquilizers.
Checking in at the
Perugia airport had been very easy except for the suspicious looks
and thorough screening I got when traveling with an American passport
but we knew that getting through Stansted would be no piece of cake,
so we started looking into getting a wheelchair for my wife, who was
not confident of surviving the procedure. At the airport we found a
very pleasant, helpful man at the assistance station who provided us
with the wheelchair and told us to just follow the purple line. This
man had no connection with Ryanair and he's a credit to England. We
may have been flustered by the speed with which the purple line took
us through security. After wheeling through the unnerving spiral of
the mega-shopping center on the way to the departure gates, I asked
my wife where her carry-on was. In the confusion, I had forgotten
all about it and sitting pretty in her wheel chair, she figured I had
stowed it under the chair. I told her if the flight was called, just
get on it and I'd try to join her later, and then I fought my way
back upstream through the British version of the Mall of America to
the security area. The bag was sitting there just as we'd left it
and I raced back through the mall from hell for the third time just
before the departure gate was due to close. Actually it hadn't
opened yet.
We eventually
departed thirty minutes late, with the usual safety instructions read
in an indecipherable eastern sounding dialect, which, from the
familiar “thank you” at the end of each blurb, we realized was an
attempt at English. After an uneventful flight, enlivened by
conversation with a pleasant man from Oxfordshire on his way to view
to view the Giro d'Italia, we had another soft crash landing in
Perugia, just like the one in Stansted a week earlier. The plane
bounced, shook, shimmied, and braked hard to a stop. Both times,
visibility was good. Was the landing done on autopilot with a
defective computer hacked by Russians, or was it a training flight?
A more radical explanation would be that the premium item in the
Ryanair seating auction was the captain's chair. After all, every
year in F1 racing some young driver magically appears in the cockpit
of a minor team, his wealthy father having provided enough
sponsorship money to keep the team going for the season. Young race
drivers are not flustered by minor crashes so our pilot may have been
the same for both legs of the trip. Our fellow passengers refrained
from applause at our survival and everyone exited the plane as if
nothing had happened. No visible damage was seen but how often can a
plane take this sort of abuse before those little curled up wingtips
go limp?
We were relieved to
get back to Perugia and while we were quickly off the plane, there
was a long wait for our baggage. The dog who eagerly sniffed all of
us as we filed into the airport apparently was the only dog on duty
so after he had checked us he was taken to process the bags backstage
before they could be loaded onto the carousel. Best of all, our car
was still there in the parking lot, I hadn't lost the keys, and the
car started.
Just as I can look back on my early misadventures in Rome with a certain bemusement by now, realizing that no irreparable damage was done, back in the safety of my home I can now admit that Ryanair got us to and from London for less than the price of a high speed train ticket and in somewhat less time.
We enjoyed our time in London among family and
friends with its fine weather and splendid spring flowers. For
nomadic adolescents traveling with little money and less baggage, I
can recommend Ryanair. Just skip the extras, practice yoga for a few
days prior to the trip, eat something before you get to the airport,
and take some Xanax or whatever works for you. However, I will take
inspiration from our friend Carol, who divides her time between
Umbria and New York City. After returning to NY last autumn on
American Airlines, she said enough is enough and booked her spring
return to Italy on Holland American Lines. She returned looking more
relaxed than ever after a comfortable fifteen day passage. We may
skip the ship to England next time but the train is looking better
and better as an option.
5 comments:
Robert
Captivating story. Glad all went well in spite of the potential pitfalls along the way. Thanks!
A tale marvelously told...
UH, oh, I didn't mean to be 'anonymous'--was trying to figure out the instructions! Loved your tale of travel to the British Isles, diane
Roberto, You handled all the exciting surprises very well indeed. RHS '54 hurray!! Steve
A great yarn Robert, and funny 😆, we could easily relate to much of it. I think that the Ryanair ‘soft crash landing’ is due to pressure on pilots to get there on time to sound the trumpet fanfare.
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