My Fear of Flying
My doctor doesn't hesitate to prescribe Xanax when I tell him I'm flying. He knows my fear of flying and that I don't fly often. In fact, though I needed to see Hawaii to complete my visits to all 50 states, I considered NOT flying there. I booked a cruise tour from San Francisco, figuring I could drive from Michigan to San Francisco, thereby avoiding flying altogether. In the end, I felt that would make it too long a trip so I succumbed to the desire for expediency.
We flew round trip
from Detroit to San Francisco. The initial flight went okay. Our
bag was three pounds over the 50-pound limit—so much for the
accuracy of our personal scale back home—but we were within the
grace limit so didn't get assessed an extra $100. We made it to San
Francisco and sailed on
Aboard the cruise
ship, a comedian recounted his own harrowing story of flying. It was
a smaller, commuter propeller plane (didn't they stop making
propeller planes when they stopped making rotary phones, he asked?).
They had to re-arrange the passengers to distribute the weight
appropriately. The comedian wondered whether the heavier passengers
were seated in the rear in order to make the nose of the plane rise
during take-off.
He also wondered why,
if passenger cell phones are dangerous if in use during a flight, why
not just ban them on board altogether, instead of asking passengers
to switch to 'airplane mode.' Can you trust millennials to follow
directions like this when they are so wedded to social media? The
comedian worried that the pilot could suddenly blurt out while in
flight, “Somebody twittered. We're going down!”
Now many of my fellow
passengers found his jokes to be hilarious, but to a white-knuckle
flyer like myself, all I could think of was, “He's right.
Comedians make their livings off of observational humor that's true.
I don't think I want to fly now.”
After Hawaii and back
in San Francisco, I made sure I took my full dose of Xanax before our
flight back to Michigan. Then, while sitting at the terminal near
our gate, waiting to board. I heard, “Would Dave please report to
the service desk? Would Dave . . . “ and I heard my full name
called over the din of the passengers chatting and milling about.
My wife Wendy who was
sitting next to me didn't hear my name called, but I was sure I did.
Sure enough that I went up to the service desk to ask if I'd been
paged.
The nattily dressed gate attendant looked down at a sheet and responded. “No. We didn't
page you.” Then she looked up with an expectant smile.
“Are you
volunteering?” she asked.
Whatever would they need a volunteer for????? Was the flight crew understaffed? Did
they not have a pilot? Despite my full dose of Xanax, I seriously
could have panicked here. I didn't even follow up with the obvious
question: Why are you looking for volunteers?
Instead, I waved
her off, saying, “No, no, no, no, no. I'm not volunteering for
anything.” Then I quickly turned and walked away.
Thankfully, the flight back home was uneventful and I dozed off
frequently. Thank you, doctor. But on a hunch, when I got back home
I looked up the side effects of Xanax. Aha! Just as I suspected.
One possible side effect is auditory hallucinations.
Good to know. If I
ever fly again, I'll know not to follow up if I think I hear my name
called over the airport public address system.