In the Ritchie family, like many
other families who communicate in creative ways, we have innocuous little
phrases speckling our speech that one simply wouldn't understand from the
outside. One of those phrases is “the airport walk.” You see, Daddy + Dulles Airport
= Airport walk. Or Daddy + short layover = Airport walk. Or Daddy + anything
having to do with any airport = airport walk. On a normal 16 year old girl the
airport walk would be more like an aggressive power-walk that borders on a fast
jog. But when one is lugging a 30lb back pack, a guitar, and a small duffel bag
there isn't a whole lot of jogging happening. Please keep this phrase in mind
as you try to comprehend our international travel pace.
The
foreboding day had dawned. After a night of solid, sweet, dream filled sleep
this 16 year old awoke smiling and ready to take on the challenging but exhilarating
day ahead. Hahahahaha oh gosh, if only. Yeah no, I slept maybe 2 hours the
whole night and awoke feeling precisely like someone had fed me to a
brontosaurus and I was currently being digested in his lower intestines. Not my
best morning. Generally a cuppa will bring me around to nearly any morning but
this particularly dastardly Wednesday my stomach was in a foul mood. It
promptly expelled that innocent cup of tea. Rude. I had a nasty head ache, my
sinuses had at least 2 semi-trucks double-parked inside, and my stomach was
convinced that I had grievously wronged it by being alive this morning. Also, I
was kind of in “I hate my stupid life mode” so I wasn't exactly bearing these
afflictions cheerfully. Miss Sunshine I was not.
Unfortunately there wasn't much
time to reflect on my general misery. We finished gathering the last of our
belongings and loaded the vans. Many dear friends came to wave us of. It was
truly touching and our hearts were full as we hugged and said goodbyes. It was
NOT easy to leave all those precious friends, but alas, it had to be done. And
so it was. We are so grateful to all of you who expressed your love for us. It
is truly encouraging to know we have such a marvelous cheering squad. The Pucketts were driving our 20 trunks in
their van and all of us Ritchies were in our trusty blue minivan. It was a
weird drive. Normally a Ritchie road trip is filled with epic playlists,
laughter, wise cracks, an audio book or two, videos of drooling and/or snoring
siblings, and frequent rest stops. Not so this drive. The frequent stops were
the same, and we eventually did get an epic playlist going but it was almost
awkward. No one really wanted to admit that today was the last day we would be
all together for 6 months. Those of you who have suffered through deployments
probably know the feeling. Desperately wanting it to be a good memory, but
lacking the ability to infuse the moments with deep meaning. Trying to memorize
the feeling of having your siblings all around you and the image of them
laughing. It’s garbage. It really is. But, time insists on passing, so the 4
hour drive to DC was completed and we found ourselves camped out in front of
the British Air desk with our mountain of bags. No one was at the counter.
Apparently we were an hour ahead of schedule so we sat around and talked and
made yet another bathroom trip. Alas, the counter agent appeared and we made
our way through the line and got all our trunks checked in.
Meredith, bless her, doesn't
understand packing. It’s not like she means to leave stuff out of her bags, she
just forgets, or thinks it’s great to have half of the contents of her backpack
tied to the outside of it.
She also forgot to mention the guitar. We considered
leaving it behind but in the end figured we risk the extra baggage and lug it
with us. Actually we were only supposed to have 15 trunks but we got all 20 checked
in, ditto the guitar at no extra cost. (Holla!) We distributed Meredith’s extra
gear among our various carry-ons with some creative calisthenics and strained
zippers. Unfortunately after we got all the bags dealt with it was time to go
to security. Upon realizing this was when we were parting, my stomach suddenly
decided it was tired of being a stomach and it wanted to be a decomposing log.
It’s my personal belief that goodbyes are infinitely bad for the digestion. So
we bid the dear Pucketts goodbye. Then began what none of us really wanted to
start. Dadgummed inter-family goodbyes. “It’s only 6 months.” We repeated that
over and over and over. 6 is a pretty small number. Months is an easy word to
say. But all of us knew that it’s oh so very much easier to say “See you in 6
months” than to actually make it through those 6 months. It was an ugly moment.
Goodbyes always leave an ache, whether it shows up immediately or not.
Side note: When Helen gets
emotionally upset she likes to have something difficult to do. Her salvation
came in the form of a new role. Biggest sister. Daunting role, am I right?
Being the oldest child means you pick up the slack. You make the littler ones
comfortable, and if it costs you some personal comfort so be it. You make
something foreign into something exciting. You create the epic playlists and
point out the grand adventure. Sarah is the best oldest sibling I have ever
beheld. She has often sacrificed herself to make us happy. She’s always the one
who sits wedged between car seats, with the screaming sibling on hour 11 of a
ghastly road trip and kindly gets them to shut up. She creates a perfect
playlist that somehow makes everyone happy. She know each of us very well, and
knows exactly how to love on us and make us behave. She is one stinkin’ hard
act to follow!
Ok, so there we are, having said
the stupid goodbyes and headed off to security with grim hearts. Happily the
line was nonexistent and nothing alarming happened to our stuff other than
throwing away James’ giant tube of toothpaste. (That’s alarming because James –
tooth scrubbing = breath of hades) I had a rather heavy backpack on (one simply
cannot have too many books) and my carry on gym bag (also heavy) and Meredith’s
guitar (don’t ask) and suddenly realized, the airport walk has begun. Crud. I
have zero upper body strength. Time to oldest-sister up and switch on the
aggressive power-walk. And so the adventure began, with Helen trying to look
like this airport thing is effortless, and internally chastening herself for
neglecting arm day. It turned out our gate was about 35 miles away. Who knew
right? Eventually (gasping) we reached our gate and collapsed into those black
chairs. James said he was hungry. (James deals with emotion by eating.) So off
James and Meredith and Mom trotted off to hunt down smoothies and frozen yogurt.
No hating people; airports and departures are stressful things and require happy
munchies of some sort.
After the appropriate time had passed we started boarding
the plan.
Side Note 2: British Air is staffed
by British people. British people have British accents. British accents make
everything sound better. Flight delay announcements sound stressful. Flight
delay announcements voiced by British Air Staff sound muuuuuuch better.
Apparently some beastly
thunderstorms were right in our flight path so we sat on the plane for 3 hours
before it took off; but happily there were many good movies to pass the time.
I’d like to take this opportunity to say, I hate taking off and landing. I
don’t mind the middle part where the plane is fairly level. But I do mind being
powerless and accelerating down an asphalt strip into thin air. However, oldest
sisters think flying is marvelous. It’s NOT scary. NOT AT ALL!!!!!!!
#@?!%*&!!!!!
Gee, flying to London takes a long
time! You know, 8 hours doesn't sound long either. The first flight was
altogether pretty pleasant: nice attendants, great accents, good movies,
entirely edible entrees. The only problem was that a 3rd semi had
decided to occupy my sinuses. Heavy sinuses paired with altitude change is a
nasty combination. I had this awkward little squeezy medicine bottle that I was
supposed to shove up my nose and squirt so that it would eat away all the
mucus. Only problem was that I apparently am incapable of squirting stuff up my
own nose. (I know, it’s ridiculous. Maybe it’s an instinct from the peanut incident.
Ask Sarah.) Soooo my sinuses were still quite blocked when we started
descending into London.
Side note 3: I have always always
always wanted to go to England! We only had a layover of 4 hours and it was
about 2 in the morning when we were going to land but I was determined to have
a cup of Twinning’s in the airport. Sadly our 3 hour delay meant we had a 45
minute layover and there was no time for Twinning’s. Well, I was willing to
risk it but airport-walk-Daddy was having none of it. Merph. Maybe on the way
home.
Ok so there we were, descending
(!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) into London and quickly Helen becomes aware of the
pressure building inside her head. Crud. She tries the awkward squirt bottle.
No joy. She blows her nose with all her might. No joy. Suddenly, both her ears
block up. Great. Now she’s emotionally compromised, brain dead, and deaf.
Fabulous. Wonderful. Just what she needs.
We landed in London and sprinted
through security. I nearly made it
through, reading lips and sort of hearing people. Unfortunately my bag was
“suspicious” so they decided to sort through it. We had 30 minutes to get on
the plane. Daddy may or may not have been hyperventilating. He sent Mom,
Meredith, James, and their inoffensive bags on ahead. He waited with me,
pulling back on his waterproof shoes that hate metal detectors. The Brit
leisurely looking through my extra jeans an underwear was chatting with me about
the world cup (I think.) I had a vague idea of what he was saying but was
heavily relying on the smile and nod method. Finally we got it all zipped back
up and this time airport sprinted to our gate and slid into our seats on the
plane. We made it. By the hair on Daddy’s chinny chin chin.
Another missionary family we had
met at one of our training weeks was also on that flight about a row away. That
was comforting to see familiar people. I think they said hello but I was still
deaf so I smiled and nodded. There was much relief when we regained our former
altitude and my ears unblocked. I made a point of regular trips to the bathroom
to blow my stupid nose that I might never be deaf again.
At this point, my oldest sister
super suit was getting a little suffocating. Have a little grace, I had just
assumed the role 11 hours earlier. Maybe someday I’ll have a little more
endurance, but for the next 8 hours I allowed myself the luxury of thinking of
only self. It was lovely. And also awful. By this time I had been up for more
than 24 hours and was completely exhausted. Economy seating on an aircraft
hardly allows for a solid night’s sleep. I caught maybe 3 winks and mindlessly
watched Saving Mr. Banks and Book Thief. Both were rather depressing actually
but I was in the mood to be depressed. I
actually had a dream I was asleep in a vertical chair at Hope Haven and I woke
myself up in order to move to the horizontal couch. Bitter were my thoughts
when I had roused myself and found absolutely zero horizontal surfaces on which
to realign my sadly mistreated spine. I’m a wuss.
Finally, we landed in Nairobi. We
hit the pavement rather hard, but hey, we were back on solid earth again. I was
in a bit of a numb, bleary, unfocused state of mind but somehow managed to
resume oldest sister responsibilities and shepherded Meredith and James down the
steps out of the plane and onto a very full bus. It was raining, I remember
that. The bus dropped us off at the visa line and we slowly slowly slowly made
our way through. Then it was onward to the baggage claim. 14 of our 20 trunks
had made the 45 minute transfer. We didn't realize this for about an hour or
two and then we reported them to the security peoples and finally loaded up
three carts with the 14 trunks.
We rolled right past customs, who didn't ask to
look in our bags (thank you God!), and out to the parking lot. The Steurys (the
country directors for our missions agency) were waiting for us along with 2
other ladies I hugged but have no idea who they were. They loaded our trunks up
and herded us onto a van. It was dark, and about 11 pm. Our clocks were totally
out of alignment but we were exhausted so sleep came easily.
This oldest sister shed a few tears
that night, tucked into a fold out couch. Tears because she knew it would be a
long 6 months until her family was all together again. And because she was
exhausted. And because the stupid day was finally done. But mostly because it
was going to be a long, long, long 6 months.
Thus ends the chronicle of our
departure. It was as smooth as an international moving experience could be. We
are immensely grateful for the lovely people who helped us through that
extremely long journey. You guys are our heroes!