It’s a mess, that’s what it is. When you land in Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Third World International Airport, you’re walking into a battle zone.
It’s nonstop chaos. Airport professionals ride golf carts with loud beeps and flashing lights.
Hordes of business professionals below age 40, speed-walk past you, having loud conversations with their earbuds, dutifully working on their first nervous breakdowns.
Middle-aged Midwestern guys in New Balances, shoulder a tonnage of roller luggage, most of which—you can just tell—belongs to their wives.
Everyone is on their phones
I notice the elderly man across from me. He is wearing khakis and Merrells, the universal uniform of the Old Guy. He is breathing heavily. Hyperventilating, actually. His hands are trembling. He takes a sip of water and almost drops the bottle.
This man is having a diabetic episode or something, I’m thinking.
“Sir, are you okay?” I ask.
He looks at me. His eyes are rimmed pink. I can’t tell if he’s about to cry or not. “Have you ever flown before?” he asks.
“Yes.”
“Well, I haven’t.”
He returns to his trembling.
“I’m eighty-two years old,” he said, “and I’ve never flown. I’ve
never been anywhere or done anything.”
This is a man old enough to be my father, but at this moment, he seems very childlike to me. Fear has a way of reducing one’s age.
There is a little girl sitting on his other side. She notices what’s going on. She joins our conversation. She is maybe 10.
The kid says, “What do you mean you’ve never been ANYWHERE or done ANYTHING,’ sir?”
He looks at her. Her hair is in pigtails. She could pass for the Coppertone Girl.
“I’ve only left my hometown twice,” he says. He’s getting more nervous with each word. “I’ve never done anything of note. I’ve never been anywhere.”
“Do you have a family?” the girl says.
He nods. “Four kids.”
“How old?”
“My oldest…