Continued from: You Want Blonde Or Brunette On That?
I’d like to take a moment to point something out to everyone. As I mentioned in the first installment of this little travelogue, I have a blast every single time I visit Heather and the gang at Violet Flame Gifts (VFG). No two ways about it, and this time was no different. Great folks, great food, great time had by all. If you are ever in the area you owe it to yourself to visit VFG, or even swing by their website. They truly are amazing.
However, I think you will all agree that me going on and on about what a great time I had is nowhere near as funny as me twisting off about the silliness that occurred getting there… And, as you will soon see, back home…
As is the custom, Saturday night at VFG after a successful store event involves a party. Much food, in this particular case some killer BBQ’d ribs along with all the trimmings prepared by Grillmaster Max, and much alcohol to wash said food down your gullet. And, as is the custom, I usually imbibe enough to be the beneficiary in receipt of at least a mild hangover the next day. No exception this time, although the hangover was probably the mildest I’d ever had in my life. It was really just one of those “oogly” feelings as opposed to the standard day after maladies.
And so, late Sunday morning, following a killer brunch prepared by Devin and the gang, we were off to the Columbus airport. Our goodbyes said, Dorothy Morrison and I checked in our luggage, grabbed our boarding passes, and headed for the security checkpoint.
I’ve mentioned in the past that I am dependent upon a CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) machine when I sleep, and following suggested protocol I always transport it in my carry-on. These days, due to the heightened security, CPAP’s and I am sure many other medical devices as well, have become the bane of a traveler’s existence. It seems that someone decided such devices required an extra round of testing whenever presented at airport security. This always means that I end up standing off to the side while they swab, inspect, detect, look over, test, and otherwise run my machine through a mass spectrometer. While this takes a few extra minutes each time I check in, it has never been a major problem.
Until Columbus…
My first indication that something was up came while I was stuffing my feet back into my shoes. Instead of the friendly chirp usually emitted by the test equipment, my ears were pierced with an angry electronic squeal, followed by the surprised voice of the five foot nothing TSA agent wielding the swab.
“Sir, we’ve had a hit on your CPAP machine.”
I was equally surprised in some respects, but in others, not so much. I mean, after all, a CPAP is a little air pump with filters in it. It sucks in air on one end, and then blows it back out on the other. It’s bound to pick up some manner of foreign particulate of some sort at some point. It just stands to reason.
I finished putting on my shoe and said, “Okay. So what do we do now?”
She didn’t hear me because she was too busy putting herself on instantaneous red alert since I was obviously some sort of terrorist or something. Seconds after she began shouting and waving, a whole host of blue shirted para-military rent-a-cops descended upon me as if I was Bin Laden himself. I began to wonder just exactly what their million dollar spectrometer had told them my CPAP contained.
Not wanting to be tackled, I stood perfectly still with my hands in plain view and asked again, “What do we do now?”
The youngest of the private sector, government sanctioned SS clones stared very intently at the readout then barked, “Have you taken any medication?”
Well, that query in and of itself answered one of my own unspoken questions. It wasn’t so much that they thought I was a terrorist. They thought I was smuggling drugs. What kind of drugs they thought I was smuggling I have no idea, but whatever it was had them awfully excited.
Still, being an honest and helpful sort I replied, “No, but I did drink a large amount of alcohol last night before going to bed.”
Instead of simply dismissing the alcohol as the cause, the kid immediately took on an attitude. He sneered at me, then adopted an unnecessary sarcastic tone as he said, “That wouldn’t cause this. We’re going to have to search you.”
My out loud voice said, “Yes sir, no problem.” However, it’s a good thing they haven’t perfected a mind reading machine because my inside voice said, “Listen up you little asshole, I’m old enough to be your father and if you take that tone with me again I’ll beat you senseless with that wand then stuff your happy ass into the X-Ray machine.”
Now, here’s the fun part. The kid didn’t seem particularly pleased that I was being cooperative. In fact, it seemed that the more cooperative I was, the more he became convinced that I was the leader of some kind of international drug cartel that was using Columbus, Ohio as a base of operations. The next thing I know I’m standing there with the “two by two, hands of blue” dude from Firefly, and he is announcing that he is going to search me. He tells me not to move then starts to explain this process, whereupon I take it upon myself to make a suggestion.
“Shouldn’t we move out of the way?” I said, interrupting him.
At this point I now have a dozen passengers stacked up behind me who have cleared security and who want to get to their gates. Unfortunately, Mister Blue Hands and I have the narrow passageway blocked. He stares at me, thinks about this for a minute, and then says, “Yeah. Maybe we should move so people can get by.”
Again, my inside voice opened it’s figurative mouth and echoing inside my skull I heard, “Well Duh… Figure that one out all by yourself there Skippy?”
The kid is standing next to the spectrometer and watching all this. It’s obvious from the look on his face that he is working up some kind of “I’m gonna get a medal” hard-on because he thinks he’s caught himself a dangerous drug smuggler.
Now that we had moved out of the way, bluehands started to tell me again how the procedure works. Before he made it halfway through the first sentence I spread my feet apart and held my arms straight out to my sides. He screwed a quizzical look onto his face and asked, “You know how this works?”
My outside voice said, “Yeah, I fly a lot so I’ve seen it done.” My inside voice screamed, “Anyone who’s ever seen an episode of a cop show on TV knows how this works you moron. Just get it over with. And, just so you know, If I have to endure this anyway, I’d much rather have the hot blonde gal over there on the other security line grabbing at my crotch instead of you.”
In retrospect I suppose knowing how a pat down works made me look guilty, especially given that the TSA kid who was daydreaming about a commendation damn near soiled his britches in excitement when I automatically “assumed the position.”
And so, I was subjected to a full pat down while the wide-eyed five-foot nothing member of the federal rent-a-cops tore my carry-on apart. I have to say, it was kind of amusing when she started looking through the viewfinder on my camera like it was an alien artifact. But, I think what tickled me most was the abject confusion she displayed upon finding the vacuum sealed retail package of pepperoni sticks I carry just in case I’m ever stuck on the tarmac for 4 hours in an airplane that can’t move. (Don’t laugh. It’s actually happened, and I hadn’t had dinner that night.)
Those really confused her. I mean flat out confused. I hate to think what would have happened if she had opened up my notebook and started reading the handwritten portions of my latest manuscript.
But, anyway, when the search was over the supervisor kid seemed a bit disappointed. It was pretty clear that he thought he’d captured a hardened criminal who was stupid enough to smuggle drugs in a carry-on bag. On top of that, when they gave me back said carry-on bag, everything had been shoved back into it in such a haphazard fashion that it ended up taking me twenty minutes to straighten it out. And, on top of that, I had to ask them to return my CPAP machine. Yeah, go figure.
But, it gets better…
The excitement now behind us, Morrison and I strolled down the concourse to our gate, checking out the restaurants along the way since it was approaching lunchtime. For the next hour, and even right on up until we boarded our flight, the blue shirted TSA kid kept popping up everywhere we turned. I’m fairly certain he was following me.
It’s too bad this didn’t happen around Thanksgiving. If it had, then I would be able to write a 17 minute long, forever enduring folk song about it, and then go hang out with Arlo Guthrie. (I wonder if he gets searched by the TSA?)
But do you want to know the real kicker? We finally boarded the airplane, this time an Airbus 320, and as soon as we were in our seats the pilot came over the loudspeaker with a familiar piece of news. It seemed the auxiliary power unit was malfunctioning, we had no air conditioning, and that instead of sending someone to Sears for a DieHard battery, he had bribed some guys in yellow vests and earmuffs to give us a jump, just as soon as they could find where they stashed the cables.
I kid you not.
Maybe I should start packing jumper cables in my carry-on. Wonder what the TSA would think about that…
More to come…
Murv
Deb
July 15th, 2009 at 06:53
My inside voice is a lot like yours…except I think it cusses more. And sometimes makes me laugh out loud, so people nearby think I’m certifiable.
M. R. Sellars
July 15th, 2009 at 07:03
Oh, mine cusses, believe me… 😉
Toni
July 15th, 2009 at 08:01
Okay, now I’m worried about my flight in August! LOL Let’s hope Indy has their crap together.
Tasialue
July 15th, 2009 at 08:01
My dad had metal plates and screws in his leg for about three years. He set off the metal detectors every time, and he was just a cooperative. For some reason, that really pisses them off. I guess they’re just used to people being snippy with them.
Ain’t it a pity how “snippy” has become S.O.P. for so many people nowadays?
(I sound like a seventy-year old woman sitting on the porch in a rocking chair: “Back in my day…”)
Sandi
July 15th, 2009 at 08:23
I’ll never forget getting stuck at O’Hare, returning from an INATS on a hot, sticky, June evening. Same thing happened, except we had no power at all. Read that as no electricity, no AC, no nothing. The pilot limped us over to some parking area located away from the airport, and there we sat, alone and forgotten, away from all the other planes on the Group W bench, for over 3 hours. Screaming children, older passengers, rising humidity, and the guy next to me calls the Mayor’s office to try and get us some help. But because we were on O’Hare property (so to speak), the city couldn’t help us because it was a Union situation. Luckily for us, all the Unions in Chicago had already closed up for the night. Don’t know how the pilot did it, but he finally got us mobile, at which time they decided that the plane needed to go back to the terminal so it could be repaired. So they dumped us back at the building and basically, we were on our own to find new ways home. From a nearly empty flight, I ended up being crammed into another flight, next to the window where I hate to be. And the Russian couple next to me didn’t understand enough English when I offered to switch with them so they could have the window seat. That was the last time I ever flew American.
C.H. Scarlett
July 15th, 2009 at 08:36
Well, lol, I guess you should be thankful that they didn’t probe you or anything. “Skippy” seemed far to anxious for some action lol.
chaoticpix93
July 15th, 2009 at 09:08
Well the Columbus airport security really have nothing to do. I mean, who’s going to try to hijack a plane from Columbus? I mean, there was the idiot right after 911 who got past security with a belt knife and called 610 WTVN to let them know while he’s being tackled by security.
Don’t laugh, we are a trafficking hub for drugs and guns for some bloody reason I can’t figure out. Except maybe they’re from Canada? Although those are in big rigs not through the airport.
So again, give them a break. They don’t get much excitement there.
M. R. Sellars
July 15th, 2009 at 20:24
Well, if frisking an old fat guy and jumping around throwing vacuum sealed pepperoni sticks in the air like the apes from the beginning of 2001: A Space Odyssey is what qualifies for excitement, they should seek therapy as soon as humanly possible… either that or form a club and have private meetings. (LOL)
I think the only excitement they got that day was self induced and all in their heads. 😉
Sully
July 15th, 2009 at 09:24
Perhaps you should have told them they were detecting the vodka you usually fill your CPAC humidifier reservoir with to aid in blissful sleep.
I use tequila and crank it all the way up!
Only in America 🙂
Sully
MarnieColette
July 15th, 2009 at 09:30
I love this. My mom and step dad travel with CPAP’s and they have had some stories.
Schueyman
July 15th, 2009 at 23:35
I’m sure I’ll eventually have to fly somewhere again, and I am giddy with interest in what they’ll make of my insulin pump.
M. R. Sellars
July 16th, 2009 at 04:39
Apparently you just need to avoid Columbus, OH… 😉
Schueyman
July 16th, 2009 at 11:08
Ooooh, but I was just dying to visit the Unknown Boy Scout monument and the Animantronic Smokey the Bear! Dang it!
Arachne
July 19th, 2009 at 07:43
You are lucky. At least your my interior dialog ALWAYS becomes my out-loud voice. I seem to have little or no control over it. Gets me in NO end of difficulty. And my son inherited my problem-and it HAS landed him in jail.
Arachne
July 19th, 2009 at 07:43
***Correction****
You are lucky. My interior dialog ALWAYS becomes my out-loud voice. I seem to have little or no control over it. Gets me in NO end of difficulty. And my son inherited my problem-and it HAS landed him in jail.
Heather Killen
August 5th, 2009 at 07:37
I’ve been on the road with the shop the past 3 1/2 weeks so I just read this. So sorry you had to deal with the insipid, over-enthusiastic morons who….well I could rant but, I won’t. That’s why I usually stay within eyesight of you guys untill you get through security. So if someone needs to be snatched baldheaded I can do it and you can be on your way to your family. Cops appreciate cooperation and people being level headed, posers who need to lay off on the java or in juniors case the probable constant Mt. Dew drip need a sedative or a switch taken to him….and the airlines wonder why people are choosing to drive more than fly. Sheesh man! I’ll fly you into Cinci or dayton next time. Although, Dayton likes to double and triple check me because I’m not a blonde and my skin is more olive than elmers.
M. R. Sellars
August 5th, 2009 at 07:52
It’s all good. That’s the first time I have ever dealt with that at Columbus, so I figure it was an isolated incident… I’m still wondering what my CPAP picked up in its filter that triggered the alarm, because it was fine on the way out of STL… Do you maybe do hemp oil soaps or something? I’m wondering if maybe that was it, because it only takes a particle or two in a million to set off the machine, and since my CPAP was sucking air for a grand total of about 10 hours… (shrug)
M. R. Sellars
August 5th, 2009 at 07:52
BTW – How did things go on the road? Fantastic I hope! 🙂
Heather Killen
August 5th, 2009 at 18:34
No I don’t blend with hemp seed, but all the oils, herbs and base materials are down in those cabinets. A few hundred pounds all together. Love those cabinets!
The road was wet and muddy, esspecially New York where we had 6″ of mud to deal with, yuck. Looking for fests in the Keys, Bahammas or Carribean to work. lol 😉
M. R. Sellars
August 6th, 2009 at 05:13
Yeah, I suspect the filter just picked up some particulate from some essential oil or something and that set them all running. No biggie…
And, if you find fests in the Keys, Bahamas, or Caribbean, let me know because EK and I will be there!!! (LOL) 😉
Lovely
August 12th, 2009 at 21:48
Murv, I think I found a picture of the plane you flew in. let me know if I’m right ^_~
http://thereifixedit.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/tifi-andpplask.jpg
M. R. Sellars
August 13th, 2009 at 04:56
Bwuahahahahaha!
Yeah, I think that might’ve been the one. 🙂