Things I Learned From Flying Business Class
When my sister changed my flight for me, so
I could spend a few extra days with the family I know and love, I was a little
worried that the ticket wouldn’t stick. Don’t ask me why, but I have a kind of
paranoia about traveling in general. It manifests itself in frightfully
illogical ways: thinking that I am on the wrong train, even though I can
clearly read the destination and the stops in Japanese and English; thinking I’m
driving the wrong way down a one-way street, probably because there are no
other cars going my way and the on-coming traffic seems to be glaring at me;
thinking that my seat will be given away because they’ve overbooked the flight
(they always tell me they won’t do that, but how can you trust them? These are
companies that intentionally sell too many seats and then ask paying passengers
to inconvenience themselves and step onto another flight at the last minute!).
So when I got to the gate and they called
my name over the loud-speaker, I instantly had heart palpitations that would
make a cardiologist salivate. I approached the desk and saw on the screen that
*gulp* my previously assigned seat was now available to anyone who wanted to
upgrade. And I had been so stoked that I could ride in Economy Plus for the
first time on an international flight! Dammit.
They issued me a new ticket, and being a
brainy chick, I took a look at the number and noticed it was lower than before.
About twenty rows lower. I got upgraded to business class. Fo’ free. Woo-hoo!
First, there is the abundance of free
cocktails and liquors. I started my journey off with a glass of champagne,
already a little homesick for the mimosas my sister made all throughout
vacation.
Another thing about flying business class
is that you board first which means you don’t have to fight your way down the
aisle with all the poor peons savagely hacking their ways through the jungles
of jutting-out-into-the-aisles roller-suitcases, set aside by grandmas in their
Monterey Bay t-shirts and performance sneakers, as they search for an extra
blanket or pillow to keep their toddler grandkids warm for the thirty-five
minutes (out of a twelve hour flight) that they’ll spend sitting down in their
own seats.
On the other hand, you do get kind of soft
and bored while you sip your complimentary champagne and wonder if you look as
out of place as you feel, which is very. I didn’t know how to work the tray
table, the television (which was on an Arabic setting – have you ever tried to
change it back to English from backwards-squiggle-dash? I just hit every button
on the screen, on the controller, and after the second glass, on the floor),
and for a while, forgot that I knew how to read a menu.
Another thing is the wine. You have a
selection, not just of red or white, but of grape and region, and still or
sparkling.
Yes, you have a menu. Food is no longer the
potential horror story that follows the plight of “the thing that lurked
beneath the tin-foil.” It still doesn’t taste particularly like anything, because
at 35,000 feet you can’t really taste anything, anyway, but it is recognizable
as material that once was food you might see on your plate at home. Which is a
huge step forward.
Did I mention the sake?
Then comes the dessert course on a little
tray. No one could tell me what exactly the cheese plate was, but since I was
headed to the land of less cheese than is healthy, I went ahead and took a
chance. Muenster, something else, and something else.
And brandy. (Or maybe it was whiskey. It
was golden, though, that’s for sure.)
After all that eating and enjoying, you
settle down in a reclining chair that is not limited to four and a half inches
and a gradient of 160 degrees. The footrest moves, the headrest moves, the
backrest moves, hell! it all moves into an almost perfectly level bed. It’s
like bunking down with fifteen other people you’ve never met before and
hopefully never will meet again, since you’ve made more trips to the
(conveniently located) loo than the rest of the cabin combined.
Even if you’re in business class as a
result of a happy accident and a few other people taking a later flight, it’s
nice to know that you can still enjoy the amenities. A few more flights and I’ll
be a pro.
1 comment:
What a grand adventure! I can't wait for my turn! :-p
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