Fly By Night
I travel a good amount, and whenever I get on an airplane, I don’t worry so much about mechanical malfunctions or terrorism or, for that matter, whether there will be meal and whether it will be edible. No, mostly I worry about whether my luggage will arrive with me. And now my anxiety is further fueled by this new report that 30 million bags were lost by the airlines last year — and worse, of those, 200,000 were never found.
First, a moment of silence for those shoes, dresses, toiletries on a one-way trip to nowhere.
Now I have issues as it is with trying to stuff my carry-on luggage with everything that could possibly reasonably be defined as essential. Many a time have I been chastised at check-in about having one too many personal items (yes, I can fit my handbag in my carry-on, thanks, if I really had to and really crammed it in there…). But who can blame me? You can’t check your laptop. You can’t check your underwear or your La Mer or your toiletries or your jewelry. And you definitely can’t check any of your Pradas or Manolos. All essentials, I tell you!
So you can understand how I end up with a 50-lb. carry-on. And it’s all because I’ve learned my lesson the hard way. I think every time I flew Alitalia they misplaced my luggage. But luckily it was always on the way back from Milan, so my fashion week wardrobe was never disrupted. Okay, so my late arrival at the airport and lack of Italian colloquialisms beyond “Dov’e Prada” probably played a role, but still. I was rather put out by it all!
And that’s not even my worst lost-luggage story. There was the time a couple of years ago when, still groggy from getting no sleep the night before (packing of course), I dragged my sorry self to JFK to get on a flight to L.A. for the Grammys. So many mistakes were made that fateful morning: (1) I put my Grammy outfit in my checked luggage. (2) Really, is there any other mistake to list? (3) Oh wait, I didn’t notice that the United staffer checked me into a flight to San Francisco instead of L.A.
I didn’t realize that my boarding pass said SFO until I was already beyond security, so I had to run back (heavy carry-on in tow) to the counter, and of course by then my checked luggage was long gone. I’ll admit it. I freaked. There wasn’t much time left before departure, so the guy re-checked me into the correct flight and swore he’d run down to the luggage area and replace the tags himself. . . if it was still there. Sure, he was being honest, but it sounded menacing all the same. And I couldn’t stand and wait for him to come back; I had a flight to catch.
Needless to say, it was the worst six or seven hours of my life. The entire flight was spent with my stomach in knots, wondering if I would ever, ever see my clothes again. Whether I’d have to wear the same outfit every day that week. Whether I had actually put a luggage tag on my bag…
Thank God my suitcase did show up at LAX. But my nerves barely survived that scare. Never again, I told myself. Never again. I know other frequent travelers who swear by FedExing their bags ahead of time. But did I ever tell you the story of how FedEx lost my cousin’s engagement ring…? (Apparently, transport foolishness runs in the family.)


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March 22nd, 2006 05:22
Oh my god, I totally know how you feel, its a major phobia of mine……the tension in my stomach and whole body til I see the case/bag coming around the conveyor belt is unbearable.
I also stand as close to the point where the cases come out as possible as I also have an irrational fear that someone will take my bag off the belt by accident……imagine some old man taking your bag……I’m sure he’d be as upset as me.
I am so glad to see that someone else feels the same as me.
March 23rd, 2006 08:51
Been a reader for some time now. I have the same fears for my luggage full of costly precious jeans whenever i travel!! And i’m doing it again in weeks!
March 28th, 2006 11:29
If you’d like to go shopping for your very own belongings, or perhaps someone else’s (perhaps Alex’s lost gown), follow the link below, which tells you where the airlines sell your lost luggage:
http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/technology_internetcritic/2006/03/shhhh_unclaimed.html
March 28th, 2006 12:00
Wow, that is a truly upsetting (and yet entertaining) article! Now I know where to go if I lose my luggage. Of course, I’d only take a carry-on bag.