Some of My Best Friends Are Strangers
Slot me into an
airline seat next to an interesting-looking neighbor,
with a gin and tonic and a back-up copy of War and
Peace, and I'll surrender to serendipity. After all
these years, and goodness knows how many
expense-account miles, my think-bubble still fills
with anticipatory asterisks and exclamation marks at
the prospect of meeting someone new. I remain an
unreconstructed Walter Mitty who has not accepted that
the most interesting person on the plane is sure to be
sitting two rows in front of me. Human contact --
however inhuman -- is probably the last adventure left
in air travel.
Not that Fate has
always given me an even hand. Sartre knew what he was
talking about when he said: "Hell is other people."
There was the man who spent six excruciating hours
trying to sell me a corporate jet; the woman I spent
six delightful hours trying to seduce, only to have
the cool dry handshake after touchdown. "No, I'm OK,
thanks, my husband's meeting me." And the
long-distance life story: "You're a writer! My life
has been so interesting. I'll tell you my story, you
write it up and we'll split the proceeds."
(Even worse was
boasting about being a writer, only to meet a real
novelist on a promotion tour for his new book -- the
kind where the author's name is three times as big as
the title.)
But why do people have
this urge to tell you their life story? And why are
instant friendships forgotten as soon as the wheels
touch down? The truth is that nobody wants to
remember. As Groucho said: "I never forget a face; but
in your case I'll make an exception."
My theory is that the
relationship between passengers sitting next to one
another in a plane has a confessional element to it.
Relaxed by food and drink and the prospect of never
meeting your captive companion again, you can unburden
your soul without trepidation.
In the old days,
before seats were assigned, you had to target a
seatmate in the departure lounge, follow him or her up
the steps into the plane, and fling your briefcase on
to the adjacent seat with a disingenuous
smile.
Nowadays, you're left
to the mercy of the check-in clerk. On long flights I
ask for an aisle seat so that I can escape from my
seatmate or adopt a custodial stance as circumstances
demand. "Shall we share a central table?" or perhaps a
more risquÈ "Your armrest or mine?" are useful
gambits when the drinks come round.
People who complain
about getting shanghaied by inflight bores often have
themselves to blame. Simple stratagems like putting on
the headset, fiddling with your laptop or pretending
to read (or write) A Brief History of Time should do
the trick.
One way to attract
attention is to delve into a crowded briefcase (people
can't resist squinting at someone else's belongings).
You can lubricate the gambit with a conventional
piece, like bundles $100 bills or a stuffed boa
constrictor.
But don't make the
same mistake as a former colleague of mine on a flight
home from India. He showed a necklace he had bought
for his wife (this is a trues story) to the woman he'd
been chatting up -- which she graciously
accepted.
The ultimate
conversation killer (not counting the necklace
transfer) is to answer "What do you do?" with, "I'm in
deep-sea sewage." The classic defense -- assuming you
crave company -- is to find another seat by standing
in line for the lavatory. You may suddenly spot a
long-lost friend as you would at a cocktail
party.
One idea might be to
allow us to change seat half-way through a flight so
everybody gets the chance to meet. After all, on a
long-haul flight you may be in the air for up to 16
hours. That's almost long enough to get married, start
a family and get divorced, although not necessarily in
that order. (No, I have not, is the answer to your
question.) The next generation of 600-seat jumbos
promised/threatened by Boeing Airbus, will be like
airborne villages with infinite scope for social
congress, should we so desire.
Meanwhile, I think
airlines should offer more latitude (not to mention
longitude) in choosing in-flight companions. One idea
might be to use the reservations computer for a spot
of computer dating. They would simply punch in your
high-altitude likes and dislikes and match you with a
suitable seatmate.
We might even see
appeals like the following in the personal column of
the New York Review of Books:
"Sales executive, 35
(can pass for 34), attractive management style, into
white-water canoing, Indian artefacts, client lunches,
seeks upwardly nubile flights companion for meaningful
business-class relationship, view sharing seat-back
videos, tall stories. Sincere replies only,
please."
But if you find, as I
do, that most fruitful in-flight encounters take place
in the mind, beware of the "snore-syndrome" --
floating off into a Mittyesque trance, and waking up
to dusty looks from your neighbors.