I invite you to join
me on a voyage in the “Not So Way Back Machine” – Destination: December 21,
2013. Oo-ooh, exciting. We’re going back in time four weeks!
Are you ready? Let’s travel.
Zoom.
Hawaii…
The skies, bright blue, the warm, velvety breezes pushing
clumps of clouds along like they’re late for a meeting, the reef-barriered
waters swish-swashing rhythmically against the shore.
And that’s it for description.
Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables plays a central role in my (as was Bill and Ted’s)
excellent (Hawaiian) adventure, which I shared with the inestimable Dr. M, our beloved
daughters and their outstanding husbands, and a Divine sunbeam named Milo, age
two plus two months. Hugo, in a book
that exceeds 1400 pages in length, has no difficulty spending four pages
describing the fading curtains in a deserted convent. I, sadly, have no similar abilities.
I can simply suggest the humid but easily bearable Hawaiian
heat on my skin, the uncharacteristic silkiness (compounding, unfortunately,
the appearance of thinness) of my hair, and the cool and comforting graininess
of the sand between my toes. If you can
get some sense of that from the words, you got Hawaii.
It is a spectacular natural delight. (Which the Americans should have left to the Hawaiians but didn’t, resulting in a exotic,
tropical wonderland dotted with California
Pizza Kitchens.)
We have enjoyed many Hawaiian islands and their always comfortable
accommodations on family vacations for over thirty years. But we keep coming back to the Kahala (which has undergone three
ownership changes during that period) on Oahu.
My family views it as almost a second home. I, as exemplified by a certain disturbing
incident I experienced with a self-important hotel guest which I shall go into
by and by, harbor conflicting sentiments.
In contrast to the less than primo locations we are
traditionally assigned to, our room this time faced directly on the ocean.
And the hotel’s
parking structure.
The result of the way the hotel’s placement is situated. You look from the balcony and you see the
circular driveway below you, a multi-leveled parking structure to your right,
the hotel’s main entranceway to your left, and extending behind them, a wide… what’s
the word?… Hold on a second, I’ve been away from the keyboard a while… wait
yeah, I’ve almost got it… Man! How
frustrating it is sitting here waiting for a word to show up! I might have told you this, but when I was
sixty, I got mono, and even after I recovered, there remained certain words I
was never able to…
”Arcing” – that’s what I was looking for!
…and extending behind them, a wide, arcing expanse of ocean,
eye-browing majestically across the horizon.
For the first time in thirty years, we had scored the highly
coveted “Ocean/Parking Lot View” room. It
was the most magnificent – and simultaneously mundane – vista I have ever had
the good fortune to behold.
After quickly unpacking, I took a solo tour to the beach
area, visited last about year and a half earlier. (Our most recent stay there had been two
Aprils ago, where we were able to take advantage of reduced room rates and
diminished (compared to “Christmas Week”) hubbub.
For reasons too uninteresting to explain, we were now back
to our more habitual, and considerably pricier, “Peek Visiting Period” routine,
fighting for breakfast reservations at somewhere approximating breakfast time,
and access to the inexplicably insufficient beach seating, (bringing me back,
in passing, to the “Disturbing Incident”, whose specifics I shall unveil at the
appropriate moment.)
There is a small bar abutting the beach area just up from
the ocean. I ordered an iced tea. It was delivered in a clear, plastic cup,
accompanied by the bill, discreetly inserted inside a dark, leatherette
folder.
Five-fifty, plus tax.
To soften the blow of paying through the nose for a drink
whose ingredients cannot be worth more than a nickel, I was informed that I was
entitled to free refills.
“All week?” I inquired.
My ironic query made a waitress standing off to the side
burst out in appreciative laughter. I
love making waitresses laugh. Especially
those of a demographic with whom I’ve been told I am no longer able to connect. The bartender, however, remained stoic.
“No, just for today”, he unnecessarily explained.
The long flight and the iced tea encouraged a visit to a
nearby Men’s Room, where I experiencef my first example (on that trip) of the sense of entitlement
an unfortunate number of the Kahala’s hotel
guests adopt as their natural birthright.
What I was confronted with led me to consider suggesting a sign they
should nail over every Men’s Room door in the hotel:
“Hey, guys! The
toilets may be self-flushing. But the
urinals aren’t.”
Throughout our weeklong vacation , whenever I availed myself
of the facilities, I had to flush first because the guy (or guys) who’d
preceded me hadn’t.
What’s more outrageous than “Too Big To Fail”?
“Too Big To Flush.”
To be continued…
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