The thing with Condor Airlines
(international, not domestic) is that they ask you money for headphones, have
an amazing movie collection of exactly two (a horrible chick flick and an
animation movie) unless you pay, and don't even let you choose between chicken
or pasta if you are at the rear end of the plane (they just run out of
chicken). With the bad food, cheap plastic that would have broken while slicing
chicken anyway, and the terribly cramped leg space, I am glad that they don't
ask money for using the bathrooms. With 11 hours to kill on my flight from
Germany to the USA, I decide to watch the movies with English subtitles and no
audio anyway, only to realize that while all that Cameron Diaz and two other
women did was wear skimpy clothes and plot to avenge the man who was sleeping
with all three of them (such intellectually stimulating stuff!), they played
the captions from a WWII movie the entire time. Diaz wades into the ocean in a
bikini and someone talks about bombing Berlin and moving in to Poland.
Having said that, there were no major
mishaps and I did reach Seattle fine. G was at the airport with the kids. The
3-year old kicked me in excitement, got confused between our names, and called
me her name. We struggled to load the two huge bags risking herniated uteri, G
rightly asking me if there are bodies hiding in those bags. "No, just
kilos of German chocolates to last me the year," I replied. The only
reason I got away not paying extra for heavily overweight bags is because I
made a sad face and told the kind lady at the airport that I am leaving Germany
for good. My German bank (can't say enough good things about them,
sarcastically though) decided to give me back my entire savings of two years in
50 euro bills. I am serious. Risking thieves (remember Greece from not too long
ago?), random bag checks, or emergency plane evacuations, I had to get very
creative about transporting thousands of euro in cash.
Seattle is a brief pit stop before I head to
my final destination. I have been missing Germany more than I thought. It feels
strange that no one is speaking German anymore, people are not stinking of
cigarettes, and restaurants are serving water even without asking. Even more
surprisingly, I see Indians walking on the streets for a change. In a funny
way, I do feel like an alien (in the USA, they call people like me alien), only
from another planet. I got to eat comfort food like idli and biryani at G’s
place after months. I am getting a little bit of cold feet right now with this
new chapter starting for real this week and have been jet-lagged and up since 2
am every day. I am not sleeping well. Often, I start planning what all I need
to pack when I go back from Seattle to Germany. Only that I don’t have to go
back to Germany anymore. My brain refuses to acknowledge that I am back in the
USA for good. For two years, I shuttled between Seattle and Germany, praying
that I make it back, bringing German chocolates and taking back my favorite
stuff from Seattle (for example, seaweed from Costco). It does not feel any
different this time. Of course I am not schizophrenic and do not live in an
alternate reality. So it is easy for me to realize this and quickly switch back
to reality. Within a few hours of arriving, I have a cell phone and I am using
a credit card and microwave. For two years, I used none of these (I used the
credit card only to purchase international flight tickets, daily purchases in
Germany happened using cash). It feels like someone has pressed the reset
button in my life from 2014 (when I left the USA exactly this month). In a
heartfelt conversation with a close friend, I told her although I did
everything in my capacity to move back to the USA with a job, I am just not
able to calm down or feel like I have really moved back. She told me that I am
suffering the sure shot signs of post-traumatic stress disorder.
The funny thing is, I will have to take a
driving test again, both writing and practical. It feels like being in college
and having to study for fifth grade. It’s not good enough that I drove
extensively for many years before I left the US. It’s amazing how many hoops I have
to jump just to settle in before starting the most challenging job of my life. Right
now, my brain feels like it has been centrifuged and pulverized. I feel
exhaustion way more than excitement. I am mostly navigating in auto-pilot mode,
reminding myself to take deep breaths again and again. PTSD, it definitely is.
sunshine
3 comments:
I am so happy for you Sunshine! Wish you good luck with your new job. :)
I am currently looking for jobs and when I feel low. I remember you for motivation:)
Wish you all the best with your new innings !
Keep shining :).
Welcome to USA! Hope you have fun in your new job. All the best :)
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