I Will Never Be Good at Airports

Last week, I flew to Eastern Canada to see friends, visit my former residence and pull off a stunningly mediocre performance in the national intercollegiate debate championships. All in all, the journey really highlighted the fact that I haven't changed whatsoever since leaving the wine-drenched, cinderblock zoo of my old university dorm. But what really highlighted my woeful inability to function as an adult on this trip wasn't my travel planning, my social skills, or even my debate performance. Oh, no. It was the airports themselves.

This is usually a place where adult behaviour is required.

But it's not just one aspect of airports I'm bad at, or even travelling as a whole. Oh, no. I manage to fuck up several distinct aspects of the airport experience, all of which I've lovingly detailed for you here:

Checking In

Checking in is supposed to be easy. You can do it from the comfort of your own home. I mean, you can do it on your phone, for God's sake, and if there's anything the 21st century has taught us, it's that tasks you can achieve on your phone are simplistic and idiot-proof.

Thanks, 21st century!

Now, I'm generally an impatient and impulsive person, which means the moment I get the "you can check into your flight now" email, I fish out whichever mobile device has the most battery power left and blaze right on through the online check-in service. This is for two reasons. 

Reason #1: Despite choosing to fly with Air "I'm sorry ma'am, we seem to have mistaken this domestic passenger jet for an aircraft carrier and sold 2,832 tickets, so you don't have a seat right now" Canada, I am still laboring under the delusion that checking in sooner will get me a better choice of seat.

Reason #2: I must have a window seat when I fly. Sure, the view of the cities down below is neat and all, but the real advantage of this is that if I end up with a screaming baby behind me at 32,000 feet, I can smash out the window and watch that little fucker get sucked right out of the airplane.

Next time you're flying in the cargo hold, you little bastard.

So I dash through the check in process like a coke fiend holding an iPhone for the first time. And that's all well and fine, except the check-in screens normally take the time to ask you some basic screening questions about the contents of your luggage. I'm not in the habit of smuggling firearms or live animals in my luggage, but the problem is, no two airlines ask these sorts of questions the same way. Some of them are looking for you to answer "no", as in, "No, I most certainly do not have the GDP of a small country in heroin in my checked bag". Others expect you to answer "yes", as in, "yes, I promise that my luggage is completely free of snarling rabid badgers and/or human lungs. So in my mad dash to check in, I often click the wrong one.

The contents of my luggage, according to my check-in.

Of course, when you do inevitably fuck up and hit the wrong thing, there's no option to go back and fix it, which means that airlines apparently simulataneously believe that:
1) people bring bombs onto airplanes and
2) no one ever makes mistakes.

Cognitive dissonance aside, where does that leave me? Now when I get into the airport, I'm going to be waved over to the special bagging screening so I can check in the surfboard and rack of moose antlers I accidentally told them I was bringing with me, and I'll have to sheepishly explain to the security people that I'm an impulsive idiot who can't sit still long enough to follow directions. And speaking of security...

Security

Airport security is a pain in the ass, and I'm saying that as a resident of a city that lets people with pipe bombs in their luggage get on international flights. As a passenger going through security, your entire existence boils down to one goal: do everything in your power to convince the surly-faced police academy dropouts that you aren't smuggling an incendiary device in your butt. For most people, this means quietly and gracefully performing the various tasks that airport security ask of you, nimbly leaping through scanners and extracting suspicious items from luggage.

I am not most people.

For instance, I always fail the Macarena portion of the screening process.

 For starters, I can't handle the "pulling your laptop out of your bag" thing. At all. Every laptop I own is large enough that I could use it to fend off a charging buffalo, and my main strategy for ensuring it doesn't get damaged on the flight is to cram it down into the soft layers of various debris at the bottom of my backpack. So when the security people order me to whip it out of my backpack at a moment's notice, they're not just getting the laptop. They're getting the laptop, four and a half gum wrappers, a three-year-old condom someone handed me during Health Week, nineteen receipts, an old movie ticket, a long-forgotten syllabus, four calling birds, three french hens, two turtle doves, and the anguished ghost of my teenage dreams of super-stardom. None of that shit fits in the pre-approved airline trays, leaving me scrambling to collect the remnants of my life while the woman behind me argues with security about whether or not she needs to take out her nipple rings before going through the metal detector. 

And don't even get me started on the hassles of flying with live animals stowed away in your luggage.

Hey, speaking of metal detectors, did you know that you can set them off by tripping and crashing into the sides of them? I do. I know this very well, and I suggest you take my word for it, as replicating it isn't very much fun. All you have to do to get through a metal detector is take off your metal jewelry, set down your brass knuckles and walk in a straight line through the little arch. Hundreds of thousands of years of evolution for bipedalism has gone into preparing you for this task. It should be easy. But every single time I attempt it, I invariably end up making a fool of myself  by stumbling or falling or accidentally wearing my most zipper-tastic outfit to the airport, disrupting the otherwise smooth security operation. Without fail, this earns me an exasperated eye roll from the nearest agent and a dismissive hand wave, inviting me to wrestle my knee-length boots back on and go pick up my bag of grimy receipts. After all, if I'm not competent enough to get my shoes off without pulling a hamstring, there's no way I could ever pose a real threat to security.

Airport Shopping

Airport shops serve a legitimate purpose. However, unless they sell Skittles and magazines, you aren't meant to actually buy things from them. Most airport shops exist purely so that the airport can tack it onto its list of stores, so that the public can continue to pretend that it's incredibly convenient to have an Apple store next to their gate. You know, for those times you thought it might be nice to drop $800 on an iPad so you can play 14 hours of Angry Birds on your flight. Better yet, every airport I have ever been to has a high-end luggage store, just in case you brought an armload of loose items to the airport without thinking to place them in a bag.

"This is a useful thing to have near me as I try to board my flight." - Nobody

Airports maintain tiny strip malls of popular stores for the same reason that West Edmonton Mall insists on maintaining a grubby indoor lake filled with defunct pennies and sea turtles - it looks good in a pamphlet. You're not meant to take it seriously. 

You know what a prairie-bound mega-mall really needs? A gigantic body of coin-flavoured water. Fucking perfect.

But I do take those shops seriously. I really do. Instead of wandering through with a disinterested sneer as I make a beeline for the Pringles and Pepto, I make a point of purchasing all the wonderfully tacky shit I find in airports. The things I've brought home from airport shops are strange, thoroughly useless and clearly intended to be permanent window displays. I've bought postcards in cities I've never seen beyond the airport. I've got a fuzzy, bobble-headed lobster and a magnificent cartoonish lion-head hat with attached mittens. I come home with books I'll never read, magazines I don't even like and tacky souvenirs that no self-respecting person would even dare to display inside their sock drawers. It's a real problem.

This hat is my most prized possession.

Anyone who has ever picked me up at an airport has learned to anticipate the bizarre things I'm toting when I step out of the arrivals terminal. Well, if I make it that far. You see, I've got another problem...

Boarding Planes

Boarding is supposed to be fairly straightforward. You get up, you show your boarding pass, you walk down the little enclosed ramp because you live much farther north than humans have any business living and it's cold out there, you find your seat, and you sit down. Done. That's all you have to do. Problem is, everyone else has to do it too. And everyone else is a fucking idiot.


Pictured: the least productive hour of your travel time.

They start by boarding all the people who can afford to fork over $1000 for extra leg room and flirtier flight attendants, which means it's the back of the line for you, peon. The airline then allows people with disabilities and families with young children to get a head start on boarding, giving new parents much-needed time to get all the necessary threatening, bribing and sobbing out of the way. During pre-boarding, you and all the other able-bodied passengers can stand around and roll your eyes together at the man with the sore ankle and case of the sniffles demanding the same amount of extra time and attention as a wheelchair-bound child. 

I can store this in the overhead compartments, right?

Then comes the general boarding call. Now, most airlines try to maintain some semblance of order by calling up the back rows first. That way, people won't have to passive-aggressively elbow the passengers at the front of the plane to get to their seats, and everyone can arrive at their destination with minimal bruising. The problem with this approach is that the general public hates reading and following directions almost as much as they hate waiting. Without fail, everyone crushes forward in a mass of limbs, bags and outstretched boarding passes. The flight attendant in charge of overseeing boarding has no intention to put a stop to this, either, because she just got off a transatlantic flight, she can't remember if she's in Denver or Toronto, and she's barely making enough money to keep herself in dog food. She's out of fucks to give, which means you're out of luck, because your route to your seat at the back of the plane just became a labyrinth of people, baggage, and strangers' butts.

Fun fact: the vast majority of butts do not look like this one.

But the asscrack nightmare doesn't end when you find your seat - you still have to deal with your carry-on luggage. I subscribe to the "shove it all in where it fits, your flight leaves in an hour, you swore you wouldn't leave it this late again" method of packing, which means that while I may have packed a great number of things to amuse myself on the flight, I don't actually know where any of those things are. Which means that if I want to be sure of having all my things at my disposal during the flight, I need to bring everything with me to my seat. Depending on the airline, that might mean I'm crushed up against the window, languishing under the weight of two carry-on bags (one of which contains my industrial, buffalo-smashing laptop), my mandatory Canadian tundra coat, and the encroaching belly roll of the passenger next to me. 

And so every airport experience I've ever had has resulted in my becoming flustered, broke, scrutinized, suspicious and crushed. And that's before the plane even leaves the ground. Bon voyage. 

What was your worst airport experience? Let me know in the comments. And while you're pining for my devastating wit during the week, check out my boyfriend's new blog - Obviously, Waffles!

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We Interrupt This Program...

I'm in Halifax this weekend for the Canadian National Debate Championships, which means there's no blog post this week. Try to contain your sorrow until I return with my usual wit and charm next week.

I'm somewhere around here. See you next week.

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29 of the Strangest Books I've Ever Seen

I spent several years working in a library. I was employed as a general service page, a position which mostly consists of putting books away, hauling books around, and changing the subject when patrons ask you if the library passed its last bed bug inspection.

If you people would stop sleeping with the Catcher in the Rye under your pillow, we wouldn't have this problem.

But when I wasn't sorting books and dancing nervously around the subject of basic hygiene, I spent a lot of time browsing the books that came through the library. Most of them were your average, everyday library materials - novels, kids' books, cookbooks, boatloads of old-lady porn, etc. But every now and then, something special caught my eye, and luckily, I had the good sense to photograph it. Because I don't think anyone would have believed me if I'd told them about these books.

Look, children! Everything you love can get cancer!

So, did he survive after all... or did he get sent to Hell?

There are a lot of important theological questions out there, but this one is the real biggie.

"Yes, boys, it was the chocolate pudding that drove your mother and I to divorce. May the guilt haunt you for the rest of your days."

Don't you hate it when you can't go out and pick your nose with your friends because you've developed polka dots?

No, your sister ruptured the internal organs of an ape.

Jesus, Arthur, you're like 10 years old. No more MTV for you.

Careful, Gramps, if those shorts were any shorter, we'd all see your banana.

Don't forget to take them on regular walks.

Paper bags were not optional.

There are 5,416 known species of mammal. You chose this one.

Rejected title: How to be a Bad Parent Before Your Child is Even Born

For kids who can't sit through Harry Potter without any poop jokes.

"Instead of a title, how about we just throw on some provocative words and call it a day?"

Comes with a free set of nightmares!

Finally, you can figure out what to do with all those elk corpses piled up in your living room!

Every chapter begins and ends with "chloroform".

Physicists, however, are dirty apes, and we should keep them in zoos.

Fun fact! LSD kills elephants immediately! Okay, maybe not so fun.

Who needs medical attention when you can have reassuring children's picture books?

And here I thought they really valued my precious hold time.

If your baby has laser vision, your panic is 100% justified.

It's worth noting that the library I worked at insists on shelving these in with the children's art books.

My guess would be... to not die?

Or maybe this is what dying people want. Afterlife pets.


Domestic violence isn't funny. The fish's apparent joy at shattering a tacky seashell, however, is.

You and every teenage boy on the planet.

Because... even cookies need love?

Nothing says "happy fun bedtime story" like "5 years in prison for aggravated sexual assault".

What other crazy books have you spotted at your local library? Let me know in the comments!
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The Types of People You Will Sit Next To in Class

Universities are cruel places. Not only are you required to study, hand in homework and write term papers, but they make you sit next to dozens of strangers.

Allow me to give you a breakdown of the types of people who will occupy the seat next to yours, so that you may prepare. I'm not saying that there's anything you can do to make the experience less uncomfortable, but at least you can try.

The Familiar Face - Out of the 400 faces in your class, this is the only one you have seen before, and thus you are obligated to sit next to it. Even though neither one of you is even remotely interested in associating with the other one, both of you realize that turning your back and sitting between two strangers would be the height of rudeness. This predicament will ensure that you have a full semester's worth of horrendously awkward conversations about whatever it is that the two of you have in common; if you're lucky, the person is in your major, and you met in a university class in a previous semester. If you're unlucky, the person once vomited on you in Elementary school, ensuring that you will be forced to have painful and traumatizing weekly conversations, in public, about a mutually mortifying childhood event. Dropping the class may be the coward's way out, but with the Familiar Face, it is the only way out.

Sit with me, friend.

The Golden Girl (or Boy) - They say that you are never too old to fulfill your dreams; plenty of people middle-aged and older sign up for a second chance at post-secondary. You can, however, be too old to sit next to a teen-aged college student. The Golden Girl (or Boy) is always ruthlessly well-organized, bringing about instant feelings of inadequacy in their chosen seatmate. You can be sure that the Golden Girl (or Boy) will spend the duration of the lecture peppering you with mundane questions, including "What date is the midterm?" "Is this class curved?" and "Will we be graded on the elasticity of our skin?", before immediately deciding that they unsatisfied with answers from a whelp like you, and seek clarification from the professor. By the end of the semester, you are guaranteed to retain absolutely no respect for you elders, and may or may not have tattooed the course syllabus to your cheek for the Golden Girl (or Boy)'s viewing pleasure. Have fun burning down that retirement home, champ.

Grandma couldn't care less about making the Dean's list; she's just here for the bitchin' parties.

The Space Invader - Just as humans do not belong on the surface of Jupiter, this person's arm does not belong on your desk. Space invaders all apparently graduated from Tiny Cardboard Box High School, and now wish to fill up as much space at university as they can. Throughout the semester, you can expect to come into contact with body parts in ways that you would never have thought were possible while sitting in adjacent, stationary chairs. What's that touching your hair? Oh, it's just your seatmate's toes, no need for alarm. And what is that touching the keyboard of your laptop? No need to fret, it's just your seatmate's shoulder blade. Be sure to keep a pointy object on you at all times, as Space Invaders apparently observe only the boundaries set by sharp pain and bleeding.

This is your life now.

The Axe Murderer - From the moment this classmate sits down, your body and brain will be reeling with fear and horror. But it isn't because you think your classmate is about to cleave your skull in two like a piece of firewood. No. It's much more terrifying than that; your classmate smells exactly like Junior High. Anyone who ever went to middle school is well acquainted with the pungent aroma of body spray, and undoubtedly has terrible, terrible memories that go with it. Why this crime against olfaction is allowed to walk around in the open all these years later is a mystery. But what you do know is that you're about to spend the next hour quietly wiping your eyes, unsure if the tears are due to the overpowering stench, or because the guy next to you smells like rejection itself.

Remember when emo was a thing? You do now.

The Helen Keller - When this person was packing their backpack for school this morning, it seems they forgot to bring along functioning lenses or eardrums. Now you're stuck next to them in the "nosebleed zone" - rows of seats not typically occupied by the myopic or the hard of hearing - and for the next hour, you will be this person's guide dog (a sort of Anne Sullivan, if I want to be historically accurate and just that much more offensive). Every word the professor speaks, and every character written on the board, will amount to a blank stare and a whispered "What was that?" from your seat mate. In no way at all does it make sense for this person to exist; there are special educational resources available for everything from the blind, deaf and handicapped to students who "just kinda look funny". If you could find a way to convince the university that it is essential to have grown men dressed as Pandas read your class notes to you over dinner every day, they would send for a Panda costume that very week. Besides, everyone knows that college students are notorious shitheads - it's only a matter of time before someone convinces one these poor, sensory deprived students that they are to go home and worship Lord Xenu as homework.

Pictured: your classmate. Apparently.

The Networker - From the moment your ass hits the chair, this person wants to know who that ass's friends are and what it's studying. Forget about your family, friends, significant other, goals, dreams and beloved goldfish - for the Networker, you are little more than a potential pet they might like to add to their collection. This person may be sizing you up as a potential business contact or as a potential spouse. Every lapse in the professor's speech will be a chance for them to continue with their extensive personal interview. There's no way to win - if they don't like you, you have to cope with the sting of rejection. If they do like you, they won't leave you alone until they've chased you across the stage at graduation. Whatever the case, there are a few things you should keep in mind before you engage in social interaction with this person.

1. They are allergic to Liberal Arts.
2. They know the employment statistics of every future career you could possibly list.
3. Never give out your contact information.
4. Don't feed them after midnight.

See, kids? It really does get better! Er... sort of.

Pinball Wizard - Lecture theaters aren't visually stimulating places. As per some secret university blandness policy, these rooms seem to be painted in various and exciting shades of beige, complimented nicely with aged gray carpet. Combine that with a black or brown clad professor, and you've got a veritable collage of educational technicolor in front of you. But somehow, for this person, it isn't enough. From the moment the class begins, this person will struggle desperately to fill their laptop screen with as many bright flashing lights and spinning colors as possible. It's like a game - the first person to have a seizure wins - and you get to play right along with them. Who wanted to take notes anyways? Classrooms are, after all, places for the viewing of brightly-colored anime and rapidly-spinning video games, not places of mere learning. For shame.

Some of these are more subtle than others.

The Wall - By far the most commonly seen Type of Person You Will Sit Next to in Class, the Wall is particularly difficult to write about, seeing that it has no personality or interesting qualities at all. It will show up to class on time, leave when class is over, and spend the time in between silently staring into space with a glassy gaze. It is encouraged that you listen carefully every now and again to ensure that the Wall is, in fact, still breathing, and not a clever android sent by the Computer Science department to learn the ways of human interaction. The only good thing about being seated next to the wall is that you can assume the role of any of the obnoxious individuals listed above, as they will not call you on it. And with that said, I have created monsters of you all. You're welcome.

Pictured: your entire class, every single day of your university career.

Of course, there is the off chance that the person sitting next to you will not belong to any of these categories, and will instead go on to be your bestest friend, or even the love of your life.

And you'll pass notes like the corny stereotypes that you are.

... but most of the time, they will not. Your only hope is to gain enough weight that you spill over into both of the seats next to you, ensuring a lonely but less awkward college experience.

So go eat a cheeseburger. Your education depends on it.
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