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“The fasten-your-seat-belt sign is ON,” shrieked the frazzled flight
attendant as she chased me down the carpeted aisle. “I’m sorry,” I
stammered, feeling like a frail gazelle in the clutches of a rabid
hyena, “but I’ve been drinking coffee all day and we’ve been flying for
two hours.”
“It’s captain’s orders,” she said curtly, gesturing to the
cockpit. She exchanged nervous glances with her wide-eyed colleague,
who had strapped herself to her seat.
As I walked back to my own seat—the frenzied flight attendant
right on my heels—I began to worry. Maybe the “indicator problem” the
captain spoke of was, contrary to his soothing claims, actually
something to worry about. The plane continued to circle Logan airport,
a mere 10,000 feet above the city. I buckled up and picked up the
safety card.
On that day—Dec. 20, 2005—Midwest Airlines flight 210 from
Boston en route to Milwaukee was beset by a dangerous mechanical
problem, which caused the landing gear to emit a shower of sparks as it
rose into the air. For those of us aboard, who had no idea anything had
gone awry, the malfunction was a bothersome inconvenience, a mere
“problem with the indicator,” as the captain so vaguely and
reassuringly cooed over the intercom. The plane circled Logan for two
hours, burning off fuel so as to minimize the risk of explosion upon
emergency landing.
Meanwhile, my mother crouched teary-eyed in front of in the
television screen, as my plane was depicted circling the airport on CNN
News amid much ominous speculation. As for me, I reluctantly buried
myself in Justice readings, straining under the pressure of a very full
bladder, and I wondered why the pilot insisted upon spending two hours
flying in circles when he could just as easily burn off fuel in a
straight line, in the direction of happy Milwaukee. I was blissfully
ignorant, if slightly irritated.
But as the plane descended to a veritable horde of emergency
vehicles, lights flashing in anxious anticipation, I realized what the
whole world except for the passengers on board flight 210 knew: the
plane—and our lives—had been in serious danger the whole time.
Following a quick tow to the deserted gate, Midwest graciously wined
and dined its inconvenienced passengers, put us up in the airport
Hilton, and offered us two “unrestricted” round trip ticket vouchers to
anywhere Midwest Airlines flies. Which, by the way, is not just the
mid-west.
I reeled at the severity of the incident. The similar JetBlue
incident on Sept. 21 came to mind, in which an airplane had to make an
emergency landing with its front landing gear stuck sideways. And who
could forget the tragic Southwest Airlines catastrophe—which came
barely two weeks before the Midwest incident—in which a jet trying to
land in heavy snow and ice slid off a runway at Midway International
Airport in Chicago, crashing through a fence, injuring 10 people, and
killing a 6-year-old boy.
I consider this incident an opportunity for reflection. Most
of us board airplanes—and carry out countless other mildly dangerous
tasks every day—without thinking twice about the risks involved. We
like to think that the tragedies we witness on the news take place in a
separate realm of existence, far from the impressive Ivory Tower and
the invincible Harvard student. But in this new year, let’s remember
that even in our seemingly impregnable world of airbags and
antibacterial soap, planes malfunction, cars crash, and silent
epidemics propagate in the most unsuspecting populations. Even though
we tend to take it for granted, life is in the often tremulous hands of
the force of nature.
James H. O’Keefe ’09, a Crimson editorial editor, lives in Grays Hall.
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