I missed my flight on Saturday, due to a series of events
over which I had very little or no control.
The main point of this post is in the very first line above which is repeated below:
“I missed my flight on Saturday, due to a series of events over which I had very little or no control.”
Don’t sweat over what you can’t control. Keep calm and carry on
I had been in London for the week. The first few days were spent work-shopping
ideas with colleagues for exciting new products and then on the last two days I
delivered a course for Enterprise Architects during which the delegates and I
had lots of discussions around Emotional Intelligence and emotional
self-control. And so there was some
irony in having my own levels of patience and ability to control a stressful
situation tested less than 24-hours after the discussions had ended.
I had booked to fly out of Stansted Airport which is
situated about 35-miles to the North East of London. It is not uncommon for commuters to take a
designated express train out of London to Stansted. These fast trains usually run every
15-minutes and the journey takes around 40-minutes. I had bought a return ticket for the Stansted
Express when I arrived in the UK on the previous Saturday and had planned to
take the trip in reverse to connect with my flight home. So it was all arranged and straightforward…well,
it should have been!
I arrived at the Station to take the train to the airport in
good time however, I was soon informed that there had been a fatality on the
rail line just minutes before my train was due to depart and so all services to
Stansted were suspended. The rail staff
had no idea when the line would be re-opened so I had to take a contingency
route which in reality meant taking a taxi.
I knew that this mode of transport would severely impact my time of
arrival at the airport as although the distance between the two points is not
necessarily that far, I would have to rely on the taxi’s ability to compete
with London’s heavy traffic flow and numerous traffic light systems to get me
there in-time. I needed to find a taxi
with a knowledgeable driver and find one quickly.
I began to feel stressed.
Murphy’s
law roughly assumes that ‘if anything
can go wrong, it will.’ As I recount
the situation, I now realise that I fully expected to miss my flight from the
moment I was told that the train had been cancelled. I don’t know why. There should have been ample time to get to
the airport. Taxis are everywhere in
London and must travel to the feeder airports every day. Yet I had this nagging feeling in my gut that
today was not going to be a day when things were to go in my favour. To cut a long story short, I missed the usual
baggage check-in by a few minutes. I was
directed to Security (the area where they X-ray your cabin luggage) with my bag
for the hold. I assumed, wrongly, that
they would take my hold-baggage from me – as they do at the standard check-in -
and that I would go through the usual process with the rest of the
passengers. It was here that I was
informed that my hold-baggage would be treated the same as what people from the
US call ‘carry-on’ baggage which meant that I would have any fluids, lotions,
sharp objects etc, taken from me and was given a few minutes to remove all such
items from my bag. I’m still not sure
why they insisted on this as one would think that a bag for the hold is a bag
for the hold and that all are treated equally (unless all hold luggage gets
X-rayed?). Anyway, I had misunderstood
the order to rid the bag of absolutely everything that had seemingly ever been
in contact with water! Subsequently, my
hold bag failed the X-ray test and was put aside for searching. I now had ten minutes to undergo a bag search
and make it to the departure gate. I
knew it was never going to be completed in time and protested that I would now
miss my flight. Increasing stress levels
and a breakdown in communication was causing anxiety neurons to fire all over
my brain to the point where for a second, I considered leaving all luggage
items and their now spilled contents where they were – displayed for the world
to see and make a run for the departure gate.
Had I done this, I would have undoubtedly been arrested. As the search concluded the security manager
approached me to tell me that my gate had closed and that I had now indeed
missed my flight. The expected (but
unexpected) wave of anger almost got the better of me. I wanted to retaliate, to bang my fists on
the desk, to shout at someone, anyone!
My first thoughts were about calling home to tell my wife and little boy
that I wouldn’t be home. I had spoken to
my son via Skype only hours before and I knew that by now they would be getting
ready to leave the house and drive to the arrival airport to pick me up. I had bought my son a gift and he was really
excited about getting it. Now I had to make
the call to tell him I couldn’t come home and that would make him sad. Waves of anger lapping around in my
head. Feeling angry, looking angry,
being angry. I should have been on that flight.
If the taxi had got there just a few minutes earlier or the security staff
had just an ounce of sympathy to my plight then I knew I would have made
it. Right about now I should be strapped
in my aeroplane seat watching the pre-flight safety brief. And then I thought about why I wasn’t.
Some of you will have probably considered this already but
it wasn’t really at the forefront of my mind at the time. Someone had died earlier that day. Hit by a train. As I sat outside the airport
with a large coffee I began to try to imagine what on earth they had been
thinking about at the time. I had
assumed it was a suicide, later I found out that it had been an accident. A tragic accident that ended the life of a
schoolgirl and would shatter the lives of many, many others. Anger was replaced by sadness, more so when
the details were later released.The main point of this post is in the very first line above which is repeated below:
“I missed my flight on Saturday, due to a series of events over which I had very little or no control.”
I had no control of the cause yet I reacted to the
effect. Struggling to maintain emotional
behaviour can at times be very difficult.
How very quickly perceptions and interpretations of your environment trick
your mind into thinking that events and people are conspiring against you. There is mileage in the well-known saying
that ‘it is what it is’. Living in France I guess I should know better
as I have yet to see an irate French national during my time here. They appear to laugh in the face of stress
and accept situations for what they are.
Of course, this attitude is not always possible so we must consider what
level (if any) of influence over events we really have at the time we’re exposed to them. To be emotionally competent and see the
bigger picture at all times is a skill, but most skills can be developed and
refined.
The fact is, I was inconvenienced whereas only an hour or so
earlier someone’s life had ended and the aftermath of that would throw family
and friends of the deceased into a hell pit.Don’t sweat over what you can’t control. Keep calm and carry on
Wishing you success in all that you do,
Keith
Keith
Dedicated to Katie Littlewood (may she rest in peace)
aged 15
So sad. This is a very thought provoking post on so many levels. Thanks for sharing. I also like your new blog template!
ReplyDeleteHi Tannis and thank you. I guess it just brings home to all of us the requirement to stop and think of others before thinking of ourselves from time-to-time.
DeleteBest wishes,
Keith
Great post! Many people could take a cue from this while driving in light to heavy traffic!
ReplyDeleteOn numerous occasions I've seen irate drivers harass the slower drivers in front of them, race around them and cause accidents, yet they would just carry on, driving erratically as if nothing had happened. Maybe they didn't realize the carnage they had caused (one teenager died due to his erratic driving, and I felt guilt over not getting his license plate.
It's so very true that we must accept and move on!
Hi Marc,
DeleteThanks for posting. I hope that you're now past the feelings of guilt that you mentioned. The problem I find is that negative behaviour becomes contagious and so routinely patterns emerge when one bad act breeds another and so on. This is especially true on the highways. They’ve even developed a term for it in the UK and refer to it as ‘road-rage’.
Best wishes,
Keith
Interesting reflections, Keith. What people don't always realise is the damage stress causes to each of us internally, as the stress hormones thrash around our bodies and minds. Stress is about our own sense of being in or out of control and in my opinion we do have a choice as to whether to let things we can't control stress us. If we don't want to damage ourselves, it's a no brainer.
ReplyDeleteAs you say, in the end your situation paled into insignificance in comparison to the accident.
Hi Joan.
DeleteI think you've hit the nail on the head so to speak.
It’s controlling the so-called ‘hijack’ as described by Daniel Goleman that’s key here. Our natural instinct is to respond to the ‘fight or flight’ situation with some form of overt action.
Circumnavigating our default mammalian responses doesn’t come naturally to most of us (myself being no exception). Awareness of one’s emotional-self does help but like most challenges, keeping on top of your skill requires constant practice.
Thank you for posting.
Best wishes,
Keith
Great, great post. Thank you. Whenever I find myself in a similar situation, I try to relax and accept it. Not easy. Then I try to look around and see if there is anyone I can meet, see or learn something that I wouldn't had I not been thrust into this situation.
ReplyDeleteYou brought it all together beautifully.
Hi George,
DeleteThat’s a very healthy, inspirational and useful outlook to have. If you believe in the saying that ‘things happen for a reason’ then I guess you’re pre-disposed to finding the positive in the negative. I will try to adopt your method in future.
Thank you for leaving such a positive comment.
Best wishes,
Keith
Great post and it reminds me a bit of my new tween book that's coming out later this year. It's all about our perceptions and interpretations of events and how our response to what happens to us is more important than what actually happens to us. That is so sad that a young life was lost, but it certainly puts things into perspective. I hope your son loved his gift!
ReplyDeleteWhen Robert Frost was asked to comment on what he had learned about life, he said, 'It goes on!'
ReplyDeleteGo well.
neilf
Ahh! Hello again Neil,
ReplyDeleteThanks as always for your contribution. Here's hoping that we all 'go well'.
Best wishes,
Keith
You're so right, Keith, and I try not "to sweat the small stuff"--much easier said than done! The unfortunate tragedy certainly did put things in perspective. Love your blog and I'll be back!
ReplyDeleteHi Sandra and thanks for contributing. Weeks later, I'm well past the stressful situation I experienced however, sadly, a family somewhere in England will re-live the moment over and over again when they were first told that their daughter had been killed on the railwayline.
ReplyDeleteI'll be sure to check out your blog too.
Best wishes,
Keith
I enjoyed reading such a motivating reflection on an everyday situation. It simply proves that we are all human and shows how difficult it is to stop and analyse a situation at the moment of impact. We should put things into perspective, count our blessings and learn the lesson.
ReplyDeleteRegards
Julia
Hi Julia,
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind comment.
Experiences like this really should serve to remind us to keep ourselves grounded with consideration with what's really important and what's not. As you say, perspective.
Thanks for dropping by.
Best wishes,
Keith