At
least once on a layover at the Denver Airport, I assured Cosmo we had plenty of
time to track down our gate, only to drag him a half-mile down the B concourse,
reverse direction when I didn't see the Starbucks, jog along the moving
sidewalks to the ever-lengthening Haunted Mansion-type corridor of small-town
departure gates, and slump into our seats just before the door slammed shut.
This wasn’t our only near-miss. When we stopped in Dallas on our return from Paris, we didn’t have much time to get through customs and make our connecting flight. So I was quite proud of myself for getting in line way ahead of everyone else. The line didn’t move very fast, but that was okay, because we were way ahead of everyone else! In fact, the line moved so slowly that I began to notice that everyone else was lugging baggage from that carousel over there, and we had only our carry-ons. (To the man who held our place while we made the end-run to the baggage claim and back, bless you still.)
This wasn’t our only near-miss. When we stopped in Dallas on our return from Paris, we didn’t have much time to get through customs and make our connecting flight. So I was quite proud of myself for getting in line way ahead of everyone else. The line didn’t move very fast, but that was okay, because we were way ahead of everyone else! In fact, the line moved so slowly that I began to notice that everyone else was lugging baggage from that carousel over there, and we had only our carry-ons. (To the man who held our place while we made the end-run to the baggage claim and back, bless you still.)
So
my record as a travel guide has not been spotless, even when I’m on my own. When
I first moved from Los Angeles to the coast of New Hampshire, for example, I went
on a drive to explore my new home; in an attempt to get back to Durham, I ended
up going about an hour out of my way before I realized that west meant away from the ocean.
The poet Wallace Stevens, who was concerned with the transformative power of the imagination, writes in “The Man with the Blue Guitar”:
The man bent over his guitar,
A shearsman of sorts. The day was green.
They said, "You have a blue guitar,
You do not play things as they are."
The man replied, "Things as they are
Are changed upon the blue guitar."
Just so, when I drove west to the Atlantic Ocean, I changed the orientation of the earth’s poles. In my imagination, that is; not so that anyone else noticed.
Which
brings me to Google Maps. Last spring I needed to take Cosmo (then fourteen) to
a party at his friend’s house, and as I was unfamiliar with the address I studied
Google’s directions. [n.b.: This was before we got iPhones and Siri.] Follow the blue line a little bit this way, take a jog
that way, and then look for that funny orange thing that looks like the plastic
pick you used to get in your steak telling you if it was cooked well or just
okay.
I
know the blue line is just a digital
representation of a suggested route! But I saw it as the yellow brick road, as
it were. I was looking for D Road, which should be straightforward enough,
given that alphabetical order is a pretty standard, time-honored tradition. But
Grand Junction, Colorado, cultivates a sense of humor in its street names.
Imagine the laughs the city planners had when they decided that 7th Street
should turn into 26 1/2 after it passes north of Patterson, which turns into F
Road going east past 12th Street, otherwise known as 27th!
The
blue line I envisioned, however, didn’t exactly correspond to the one that I
left at home on the computer. Rather, my mind was the blue guitar, which does
not play things as they are. Once across the river, I lost the virtual thread.
I drove down a 20 mph residential street to C Road and turned around because, logically,
if that was C, then D Road should be where we had just been, although it wasn’t.
Cosmo asked if I knew where I was going. A ten-minute drive became twenty; the
fresh pizza in the back seat, meant for the celebration, was deflating along
with, I presumed, his faith in me.
Anyway,
why did this girl live so far from school?
When
I stopped at a gas station to ask where the hell is D Road and, more
specifically, Broken Arrow Drive, the man adjusted his glasses and shook his
head. I imagined him thinking, What does she think this is, an information center?
Next she'll be asking for Gate B79.
Again,
I bless the stranger. This man was paying for his power drink, two cans of
chew, and ten dollars' worth of lottery tickets, but he took the time to pour
over the map in the phone book, with its minuscule print, and find Broken Arrow
Drive for me.
We
arrived, late, and the kids welcomed Cosmo and the pizza. When I returned later
to pick him up, I found the way easily. Still, I wonder if a GPS system that
will talk directly to him would
have been helpful: “Tell your mom to cross the railroad tracks and make an immediate left onto the Parkway (which
turns into D Road). If you cross the river, she's gone too far. Too far!
and all the blue guitars in the world are not going to change that.”
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