The three days-off come as a blessing. The memories of Osaka still mulling in between naps and meals.
‘So in the past days off I really enjoyed my time. As most of my friends were also resting in Doha, I had plenty of activities to fill that time. Lunches, visits to the Souq Waqif, proper grocery shopping and tidying up my bedroom. Also, I went to the pool and had a little ‘diving incident’, the swimming pool being more shallow than I thought, I hit my nose with the bottom of the pool and slightly scratched my forehead. It didn’t hurt, it was just incredibly embarrassing!’
I don my uniform and patiently wait at the crew terminal, the burgundy sofa of the crew lounge ruling my first ever ‘Airport stand-by’. At the mercy of any sick crew, happiness can manifest in the form of a nice layover to Bali, whereas bitterness can infest the body at the assignment of a red-eye turnaround flight to Mumbai. All crew healthy and operating, I am sent home at midnight and go straight to bed.
It’s ‘Stand-by’ duty the next day. A twelve hour shift of waiting at home for any sort of flight assignment. I check my roster after lunch and a red message pops out:
‘Hyderabad red-eye’. Not one, but two. Back-to-back. My blood boils.
Hopeful about the fact that I am still on my first day of Stand-by duty, I do not accept the changes on the roster and wait. At 21:15, my mobile rings and a voice says:
‘Hello, we are calling from the Rostering department. You have just been pulled out of Stand-by to operate Singapore and Jakarta, which is a four-day trip. See you at the airport in an hour’.
My Hyderabad turnarounds are wiped out of my life completely and a conflict between hating and loving rostering linger in my head whilst I take the bus to the airport.
Bags are packed and I am off to Singapore in a few minutes.


great post and also, great photos on flickr. Cliffs of Moher and pix in Bolivia–really great. thank you! keep up the great writing.
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Que sorte a sua com a escala de vôo né Camba?! Isso nunca acontece comigo. Um grande abraço do seu amigo de SP, Ari.
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You have a unique way of writing. So funny. Here's one— “… getting a little scratch in my forehead and nose. It didn't hurt, it was just incredibly shameful!” I love it! – Ciao from a former F/A
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