A bit OT, but an old lady stopped to help my son and me cross the road in Saigon. Not a word was spoken, giggles and smiles were exchanged and it became one of our favourite moments in Vietnam.
This week, an engineer in his 50s just stood there in the aisle, his hands clasped, as I played Olympic weight-lifting with my suitcase right in front of him. Just stood there, looking intently at the sticky carpet. Probably afraid to chip a nail or something.
Being a female who knows her way around an annual report on a 6am flight offers a unique perspective.
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Due to sheer laziness, I often end up in the middle seat, therefore in the middle of a fascinating peacock display.
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The other day, on a one-hour Sydney to Melbourne flight, ring-less Peacock #37 took 58 minutes to sheepishly drop into conversation that he had a wife. Um, well, congratu-bloody-lations. I don't know about you mate, but I'm not here, squished into seat 10E, looking for options.
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Which brings me to the final dismount. Even before the seatbelt sign goes off, the jackets get put on, the suitcases get territorially placed in the aisle, and the competitive rush to get off that plane begins. Of course, I'm left to struggle with my own bag. It's not that I expect help, it's just the harshness of it all I find a bit surprising.
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And, when I helped a fellow female traveller retrieve her bag a few rows back, her smile of thanks stayed with me all day.
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The cynic in me finds the whole experience bemusing. I mentioned this to a friend who works in politics and is also a 6am veteran. He said, “I told you. Everyone falls in love with girls on these domestic flights".
Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/exe...help-me-out-20140213-32jur.html#ixzz2tggdjcoK
THE AUSTRALIAN FINANCIAL REVIEW
Katarina Kroslakova is the editor of The Australian Financial Review's Life and Leisure
magazine.
I know how she feels. I have to beat the other pax back all the time. It's *so* tiring to be hit on when you're just walking around the street, and in the confined space of an aircraft, I just know every male, straight or gay, is dying to crack on to me. And most of the women too.![]()
As an example, QANTAS list their carry on baggage weight limit to be 7kg. I'd like to know if 7kg is deemed as heavy...
If it's heavier than that, there's always under the plane...
I do weights at the gym and it isn't heavy to carry at all. It's the lifting above the head that many might struggle with plus the balance needed to jiggle everyone else's luggage out the way and do it quickly while the line of passengers waits for you.
heh, first thing I looked for...
Me too.
I was going to go with some version of: if you can't lift it, don't pack it.
Katarina Kroslakova with husband Mike Smith & friend Barnaby Joyce/
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Given the company you suspect she's actually not a champagne socialist even if you do need to question her taste![/COLOR]
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What's wrong with being a normal, rational, level-headed human being?
You may say that but based on what I've seen some of the girls can be somewhat "capitalist" in what they are looking for, or at least all thos emails I get give that impression. As for her choice, well clearly she's after his money/power, it cant be his good looks or humanitarian instincts after all.You can take the girl out of the Eastern Bloc.....or as they say in the LOTFAP "once a red, always a red".![]()
Frankly I'd be concerned about my own health. I'm no LAME but I've been asked a few times to help with bags. Unless they are an obviously old couple who would greatly struggle I don't help. Similar story, just this morning I was asked to by a younger woman to help her put her bag on the belt, after she was ignored by other people around her. She ended up doing it herself as I was (1) otherwise occupied and (2) not going to help anyway. Of course, the bag weighed 28kg. If you can't lift it, don't pack it.I put the above question to SO (a LAME) as to what he would do if someone with a grossly overweight piece of 'hand luggage' was expecting him to place it in the overhead locker for them & he said he'd say to them "let's ask the crew where it can be stowed safely". He wasn't particularly worried about chipping a nail, but was more concerned that an overweight piece of baggage could fall out & seriously injure the passengers sitting underneath it.