Thursday, December 06, 2007

Tortured Travel

Quite a few years ago, before “writing a blog” or “keeping an online journal” were even a twinkle in my eye, I entered a creative writing contest I had discovered online. Not sure how I found it, and it cracks me up to think I had nothing better to do with my time -- obviously, this was before our children were very big and my hours each day began to be sucked away by the laundry gremlins and home work hassle and non-stop running to and from after school activities. But I was thrilled when they notified me that I would be “published”. PUBLISHED. Doesn’t that sound important? Which pretty much consisted of them cutting and pasting my story and putting it on their website.

Bit still, it made me happy. This story was actually difficult for me to write because there was a word limit and although it might come as shocking news to you, and perhaps none of you have noticed, but I have a tendency to ramble when I type, and just babble on and on and on, about nothing of importance, just blathering endlessly, and never stopping because my gosh, there is always so much to say, and abusing the comma, and creating the world’s longest run-on sentences.

Um, what were we talking about?

Oh, yeah, my story. Honestly, I had forgotten that I had written it, and found it the other day when I googled myself (and don’t even try and pretend you haven’t done the same with your own name.) Since it still makes me giggle to remember it, I thought I would share it with all of you.

The title? Is lame. But here you go:

“Tortured Travel”
by Kristie Escoe
1999

Several years ago, my husband and I were newly married and fresh out of college (another way of saying dirt-poor and up to our eyeballs in student-loan debt). He had just begun his career as a junior officer in the USAF and we were stationed at our first assignment in Minot, North Dakota. Unable to bear the thought of our first Christmas away from home and family, and unable to afford airfare, we decided to drive home for the holidays.

In a hurry to get home and not wanting to spend money on a hotel, the plan was to drive the 24-hour trip in shifts and take turns sleeping. As luck would have it, the day we were to leave, an incredible snowstorm hit. We headed off in blizzard conditions in his Mazda B2000 (read: tiny) pickup truck with our 80 pound golden retriever in the cab with us. We were afraid the bed of the truck, even with a shell on it, would be too cold for the dog. After all, the wind chill was over 50 degrees below zero.

There was no place else to sleep, however, but the bed of the truck. Although it wasn't heated, and the window did NOT connect to the cab, we were confident we could successfully take turns sleeping back there; staying warm in my husband's cold-weather issue sleeping bag. It was the kind of heavy-duty, insulated sleeping bag the soldiers used in W.W.II -- the type that zips up completely over your head. The optimist in me (read: young and stupid) saw this all as a grand adventure. I climbed into the bed of the truck to take the first sleep shift. I gave my husband a thumbs-up through the window, zipped myself in, and fell asleep.

When I awoke later, not only was it pitch black inside that bag, and I had no idea how much time had elapsed, but the condensation from my breath inside the bag, working against the bitter cold air inside the back of the truck (or some other such scientific explanation) had caused the zipper of the sleeping bag to freeze stuck. I had no way of getting out of the bag, and no way of letting my husband know I was stuck in it since he couldn't see or hear me. The plan had been for me to knock on the window when I was done sleeping -- that obviously wasn't happening. It took quite a while for me to breathe enough warm air on the zipper to get it thawed out and worked down a few inches. Enough for me to stick one arm out of the bag and wave it around like a madwoman for the fifteen minutes it THEN took my husband to glance in his rear-view mirror and notice my arm flailing about.

The entire time, I was considering the irony of me, frozen inside a sleeping bag in the back of the truck with the luggage falling over on me, desperately needing to use the bathroom, and my DOG enjoying the comfortable warmth of the heated cab. You can bet from then on if we didn't have enough money for a hotel, we just didn't travel.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

This reminds me of a Reader's Digest story! Very funny. :)

--Patti in NJ

~*~Snappz~*~ said...

So, it's 11:45 p.m. here in Australia.

I've had a pretty crappy day.

My eyes are nearly swollen shut from the little crying fit I had ealier.

I'm going to go to bed, and pull the covers over my head, but before I do, I decide to check NQWIHP, to see if maybe, just maybe, there's a new entry up.

Fast foward 10 minutes ...

I'm giggling like a maniac, smiling for the first time all day, thanking god/buddah/whoever that I decided to check your blog before heading to bed and saying goodbye to this horrible day ...

*lol*

Thanks! :-)

Anonymous said...

Hilarious!!! Being from Minnesota I can soooo relate!

p.s. What WERE you thinking?

haa haaa

Have a super day!

Anonymous said...

Thank you for another boast. Couldn't stop laughing.

Debbie from NY

Anonymous said...

Oh, Kristie you are sooo funny!!! Have you thought of contacting a Hollywood agent to put these stories to a television sitcom? I, for one, would watch all the time!

Alice said...

I laughed out loud for 10 minutes in my office after reading this. My stomach STILL hurts. Thanks for the abdominal workout today!

Anonymous said...

LOL Kristie--- Omigod--- You are too friggin' funny. I so agree that now that you've been published, your stories definitely should be televised.

We have a lot in common. Like you, I recently returned closer to home after mean ol' Hurricane Katrina drove me away. (not to the metro New Orleans area though thank god!) I lived in the great state of Georgia for a year and a half after the hurricane. While I found the people there to be pretty awesome, there's really no place like home.... especially because it means that we have babysitters again :)
The exact same thing happened to me as you on my daughter's first day at her new school this week, well, minus the ice.... we were running late so we got no pictures
:(. I think this is the first ever "major" thing we didn't get pictures for. And, as far as the woes of the new college graduate..... well my husband is an attorney who made the mistake of going to a private law school, so our student loan hell will continue on for what seems like the rest of our lives. Those first few years that we started paying off the loans, we literally lived on love and Ramen noodles.

Anyway, thanks again for always making me smile. You Rock!!!

Happy Holidays!

Dianna

Anonymous said...

Kristie,
Thank for the laugh. Having lived in Minnesota for many years I know the trials weather can pose for travel over the Christmas season, be it by plane, train or car. We once got caught in a blizzard on our way out of town during the holiday. Driving south through Iowa the winds blew sideways across the highway and the "snow fences" were useless. Our plans to ride out the storm in a cozy restaurant were dashed when we realized that we might return to the car and find a "dogsicle" (we also had pooch with us).

heartshapedhedges said...

OMG, how funny! I probably would have panicked, hypervenilated, and suffocated.

Anonymous said...

Ooops, I meant boost, not boast.

Debbie from NY

Anonymous said...

Kristie: Thanks for putting a big smile on my face. I'm still laughing.

Liz from Maryland

Anonymous said...

I almost couldn't finish this story because I am INSANELY claustrophobic and as soon as you said you were stuck in there, I started having trouble breathing. But I read on. I just love your stories.

Melyni in PA

Anonymous said...

Absolutely hilarious! I'm sure it wasn't so funny at the time, but now...it's hilarious! =)