Whenever we travel to and from Honduras and have to spend a night because of connections, we use Hotwire to find a hotel. It works and usually for a good price. I could not get all the way home yesterday and had to spend the night in Houston. Marc got on Hotwire and found me a hotel and it worked. The hotel was clean, secure and had a bed in it. And not much else. It had no restaurant inside the hotel and no restaurant or gas station anywhere close that I could see and was located on a freeway. A mixmaster, as there were freeways criss-crossing every which direction. Made supper a bit of a challenge.
I don't carry shampoo, etc. when I go to to the States. I just leave it at my mom's. It saves a lot of poundage in my suitcase. I expect those little samples in hotels. Not last night. No coffee pot. No radio. Perhaps, Marc went too much on the low end. Maybe not.
I was exhausted, sad, and knowing I had made a bad decision about leaving this soon after the funeral. I had two choices. I could have a pity party or a pamper party. I chose the latter. There were three things I really wanted to do while spending the night in Houston by myself: take a hot bath, a luxury not to be had in Honduras, read on my book, and get a good night's rest. In that room, I had everything I needed to accomplish those three things.
The hot bath, and a good talk to God, began to clear my head. Realizing I encounter unexpected things on a daily basis in Honduras, I roll with the flow and, usually, laugh about it. Do the same thing in Houston. I ate chocolate chip cookies in bed. Famous Amos directly from the vending machine. Thank goodness for the vending machine. I then fluffed up the nice flat pillows as much as they could be fluffed up and settled in with the book. I read about an hour before I turned off the lights at 8:30. Mission accomplished.
I woke this morning feeling more refreshed and knowing I had been a bit on the silly side about fretting over those things yesterday.
After having chocolate chips cookies for supper, I was more than ready for the free continental breakfast. I had never seen a continental breakfast that consisted of nothing more than white bread and a toaster. I was a bit put out at first. Then, in my mind, I said "welcome to Honduras, I mean Houston." Then I laughed. Outloud.
I then remembered all the people in Honduras and Haiti and India and Africa and all sorts of other places that would rejoice if they only had a piece of bread today. I toasted my bread and sat down and thanked God for that piece of bread. I am spoiled and I was ashamed.
I got to the airport, got on my plane, finished the book, and had an uneventful flight to Honduras. After immigration and customs, I walked into Marc's arms and he said "welcome to Honduras," and at that moment, they were the most wonderful words on earth.
Terri
Sunday, February 20, 2011
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1 comment:
Terri, please let me know when you're having to spend a night in Houston! I would love to you stay at my house! I'd feed you better too! Camille
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