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
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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