Dear
Shawn,
Shortly
after the devastating events of 9/11, Mother Airlines decided that we
needed to update our image. She gave us new uniforms. I don’t mind
change, and I did love the old uniform, especially in contrast to the
new one, but in order to save a few nickles, they did away with our
stripes. The pilots kept theirs, but the flight attendants lost out.
I
was upset, mainly, because we now looked like any ordinary person
wearing a dark blazer. I was working in the back of a 757 during
boarding, helping people get settled in. I heard the purser make an
announcement for all passengers to take their seats. “Good,” I
thought, “I’m ready to push back and get home.” A second
announcement was made asking for all passengers to be seated. I
looked around and saw no one out of their seats. Who was she talking to? When the third
announcement was made, I realized that she was talking to me.
Without my stripes, I was a nobody.
Secondly,
as a safety professional, I felt that I had earned my stripes. You’d
never see the pilots get new uniforms without them, why would we? We
are the ones in the cabin dealing with the masses and are the face of
the airline. We should have our stripes to maintain our image of
being just those professionals.
Fortunately,
I was not alone in this feeling, and a few years later, we got new uniforms
once again, and this time, our stripes returned. The uniform I wear
now has two stripes on my epaulets and blazer sleeves, which I love, especially when
people mistake me for a pilot. “Look out, Billy,” I’ll hear as
I’m walking through an airport, “that pilot is trying to pass
you.”
Tonight,
while waiting for my flight, a young man approached me and asked if I
was a pilot. I let him know that I was not, that my two stripes meant
that I worked in the cabin, and explained that the first officer has
three stripes, and the captain has four. I then asked if I could
answer his question, anyway, and he told me about how he wanted to
become a pilot. I encouraged him to follow his dream, wishing I’d
started my career in the skies much sooner than I did, and reminded
him that we will soon be facing a shortage of pilots. He was
enthusiastic and grateful for the chance to talk to someone who
obviously loves the career. And something tells me that sometime in
the future, I’m going to see this young man come onto one of my
planes with three, or possibly even four, stripes.
I did not know this about the stripes....certainly is important the crew stand out from passengers especially in safety matters. Good story.
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