Sunday, May 27, 2012

the extra mile

Southwest airlines has become a big part of my life. I've flown with them many more times than I can count, and I'm as loyal a customer as they come. It's not just the fact that Southwest is cheaper or that I can fly two bags for free (which is a huge help to someone who flies with 3-4 months worth of belongings each time). It's the fact that the people who work there are just plain nice and genuinely care about their customers - or at least do a really good job of "fakin' it till they make it." Not once in all my flights with them have I had anything remotely close to a bad experience, and on the contrary I've had many pleasantly memorable encounters. For starters, the smiles. If it's possible to have a more or less genuine smile as a flight attendant, then these folks have the former down pat. I always get a smile that's not the I'm-so-relieved-these-people-are-getting-off-this-plane-soon kind of smile but the I'm-happy-to-be-here-and-want-to-share-that-joy kind of smile. And as every good psych student knows, smiling has tremendous effects toward increasing happiness, for the giver and the receiver.While showing off those pearly whites, they sure seem to enjoy the work that they do. That attitude rubs off on the passengers, too. The entire mood of the plane changes when you hear a flight attendant making jokes over the intercom or you see another attendant walking down the aisle in a brightly colored apron. And, though I personally have never been in a major pinch while flying with Southwest, I've heard many stories of the helpfulness of their employees in fixing the situation. So, thank you, Southwest for not just sharing the LUV but happiness, fun, and helpfulness, too. (Oh and if you're wondering what the LUV is all about then you haven't flown Southwest enough.)

But, contrary to what you might be thinking, this wasn't meant to be a free advertisement for Southwest... even though that's what it turned in to. 

As I'm sitting here in the airport of the Mile High City waiting for the shuttle bus to take me up to the ranch, I'm thinking about how much of a difference even the little things can make. Like sharing smiles. Or enjoying work and making it fun. It may not seem like much but added together all these little things can really change the atmosphere you're in and the direction of someone else's day. We always hear the phrase "go the extra mile" (and it has nothing to do with the elevation difference in traveling from Florida to Denver) and probably think of that extra mile as something arduous and burdensome. Sometimes it is. But other times going the extra mile can literally be as simple as exercising the upward movement of your facial muscles on a day when frowning feels much more at home with your mood.

So, folks, wherever you're at and whatever it is you find yourself doing, I encourage you to try and go the extra mile - even and especially when that mile is small. I'll be doing the same. 

Saturday, May 26, 2012

fresh start

It's been over four months since I last wrote on this blog. That has everything to do with the fact that I was busy keeping up my study abroad blog aptly titled "How to Be a Great Dane" (if you want to know anything about my semester in Denmark and traveling around Europe that's the place to go). Since there are sadly no Danes to be found near me now, it's only appropriate to end that blog and return here.

This post finds me enjoying a final (less than) 24 hours in the muggy heat of Florida after a week-long respite with my family that was quite welcome after four months of roaming around Europe. This post also finds me preparing to leave for Colorado for a second summer at Wind River Ranch. Weird to think that a week ago today I was still in Copenhagen and that tomorrow I'll be pulling up to the ranch in the good ol' airport shuttle bus. 

Here's to the start of the next set of adventures!

Yup, my travel buddy Chester's coming to Colorado with me, too!