How I Got My Way
This isn't very exciting to someone who travels a lot, but it is to me:
Over the Thanksgiving holiday of 1987 I was flying from Seattle,
Washington to Huntsville, Alabama to visit friends. This is about the
busiest flying holiday at Sea-Tac, and the weather had the airport closed
down for a couple of days.
You can imagine what it was like: people sleeping on airport chairs and on
the floor, tempers short and hot. Since I live here, it wasn't that
inconvenient for me, and I was in no particular hurry, so when the airline
desks commenced re-ticketing I stood patiently in line for hours and
listened to the abuse heaped upon the poor ticket agents. When it was
finally my turn, I smiled sweetly as I greeted the man behind the counter,
handed him my ticket, and said I would appreciate anything he could do for
me, I was willing to wait for a seat, though I'd have liked to travel
today, it wasn't absolutely necessary.
He looked at me for a second or two, didn't say a word, worked diligently
at his terminal for a few moments, handed me my new tickets, told me my
seat was assigned and where the gate was, and to hurry, as the plane was
to leave in a few minutes. I was traveling on Q-class tickets (pretty
cheap fare). As I raced for the gate I was looking at my seat assignment
and thought, "This is First Class!
It can't be...it must be a single-class airplane."
Sure enough, the flight segment to Minneapolis-St. Paul was my first and
only experience in the first class cabin. I don't know if it was because
I was nice to the agent, or if this was the only seat available. I like
to think it was that a little bit of pleasantness made a difference to one
overworked and customer-abused ticket agent.
-A.
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