“What’s it like to fly on a plane?” 11-year-old Becca texted me.
Becca is blind, and she is my friend. She lives in north Alabama, and her parents are canonized saints. She has had quite a childhood.
Quite a childhood indeed.
“You wanna know what it’s like to fly?” I texted back.
“Yes.”
At the time I was sitting in the plane, flying livestock class, the cheapest way to fly, unless you strap yourself to the landing gears. Sometimes livestock-class passengers have to ride with chickens or various Billy goats on their laps.
Right now, seated on my lap is a laying hen named Gertrude. Gertrude is fussy and, apparently, suffering lower intestinal problems.
“Tell me what it’s like to fly,” texts Becca.
Becca is a grade-schooler who has become my good friend. I’m not sure how our friendship happened. But it did.
Among other things, we have music in common. Becca has a voice like a cherub, a mind like a razor, and she is cuter than a duck in a hat.
Becca and I have performed together onstage before. It was a success.
Last month, at one of my recent shows, she accompanied me and sang “O What A Beautiful Morning,” then “Amazing Grace.”
Then Becca told the whole audience how she lost her vision, and how the first face she expects to see someday is God’s face.
She brought the house down. People wept so hard I heard audience members blowing snot into their shirttails. People were not just crying. These were sobs, complete with wailing and moaning.
Becca received so many standing ovations that evening that many audience members reported that they were in need of emergency meniscus surgery.
It was a night I’ll cherish for the rest of my life.
“I’ve never been on a boat or a plane,” Becca texted as my plane lifted off. “Tell me what it’s like...”
“It’s like riding a tornado,” I texted back.
“A what?”
“A tornado.”
And I’m not lying, either. I hate to fly. Flying is modern day medieval torture. You’re sitting, cramped, between hundreds of stinky people who do not bathe regularly or wear anti-perspirant, and are grumpy, and everyone either had a communicable illnesses or bad gas, which they are quite eager to share with you.
“You don’t want to fly,” I text back.
“Yes I do.”
This made me smile.
Namely, because Becca texts me occasionally. And her messages are the greatest joy I’ve ever known.
I am so grateful that her parents encourage her to text me. For she is a wise child, a kid who knows more about life than I ever will.
Becca was an infant born to those addicted to drugs. She was abandoned. Then she was adopted by two parents (Justin and Mina) who deserve to have their portraits painted in the Sistine Chapel for all they’ve done to help children who need love.
Let the record show: Becca’s parents are my heroes.
“Maybe one day I’ll get to fly,” Becca says. “That would be so cool.”
Well, I don’t have any kids. When my wife and I were married, we learned we couldn’t have children. A little piece of us shriveled up.
And I always wondered what it would be like. I’m not sorry about the way our lives turned out. But sometimes I wonder.
Sometimes I see kids out in public with their parents and I get so overcome with smiles that my eyes start to blur up.
Sometimes I find myself praying earnestly for the children of my friends, even though their kids probably don’t even recall who I am.
I bring all this up because Becca wants to fly on an airplane. And although I can’t do much, I’m trying to make this happen.
I can promise you, you’re going to love Becca and her parents. Also, Becca and I perform a great duet of “Amazing Grace.”
Moreover, we are all more than happy to fly livestock class.
I’m with Steve Lifer. And there are hundreds of your readers who are pilots like me who could take Becca for a flight in a smaller plane. There’s no beverage service, but no Gertrude either. I’ll email to share my contact information and see which airport is closest to Becca and her family.
You're a hoot.
I know you can make this happen for her, especially if you ask for help. There's thousands of us that could share a few bucks. We'd never miss it & it would so change her life.
You have the power to make a Go Fund Me go wild.