Thursday, October 7, 2010

The Longest Night

In college, no one thinks twice about trekking from Old to New Eastward for a party. Neither did I, until last year's Halloween weekend. After a harrowing rain storm, my BlackBerry had been sent off to be fixed. After an awkward encounter at a party, my friends and I rode to another friend's house in Sandhill Cove. He was not doing a good job of comforting my friend, and she stormed out the front door.
Not wanting her to walk home by herself, me and my roommate followed her. When we came to the end of the street, we had a choice. We could go right or left. Without my GPS application on my phone, I was clueless. Alex seemed extremely confident when she demanded we go left. The road was dark and winding. We rounded a turn and saw that we were passing the Roger Wheeler Beach parking lot. I was concerned. Alex assured me we had passed it on our way to our friend's house. We continued walking and came to a rotary. Alex charged forward towards what she thought was the way to her house. Signs for the Block Island Ferry began to appear.
My roommate was completely horrified. "I may not know my way around Rhode Island, but this is NOT the way back to Alex's!" she exclaimed. I made everyone stop when we reached a picnic bench in front of a small ice cream shop. I called my friend to rescue us. Seeing as it was already one in the morning, he was annoyed but set out to find us. We attempted to meet him. He called repeatedly to ask what street we were on, but we had no idea. We collapsed in front of the Block Island Ferry parking lot. I cried as a I realized my replacement phone's battery was dead.
After several minutes of debating, we decided to turn around and walk back to our rescuer's house. As we reached his corner, his roommate pulled up, honking his horn. I had never been so relieved in my entire life. We crawled into the back seat, cold and mortified at our terrible directional skills. Andrew said, "I TOLD you to wait at my house!"
When we returned to Alex's house, at 3:30 in the morning, her roommates looked flustered when we stormed through the door. After berating them for not picking us up in the first place, I went upstairs and fell into the deepest sleep I have experienced in recent history. For the next few days, my feet ached miserably. Now, when I leave the house, I take note of street names, charge my phone, and make sure to wear comfortable shoes.

3 comments:

  1. This was an awesome post, and I truly enjoyed the story you told. This is something I have experienced before, but not quite to this extent, but I can completely relate to how you felt. I also really like the look of your blog, and I truly found your post enjoyable and interesting.

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  2. I can honestly say that I think my Halloween last year was exactly like yours! This really is a great post. I feel like everyone has been there at some point. I could feel your frustration as I was reading. I love that your titled your blog something interesting and unique as well. Your doing a great job. I love your writing!

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  3. Nice story, even though it was clearly a bad experience. I've had plenty of these kind of situations and the best thing you can do is learn something from it. It seems that you have. It always good to take note of you surroundings, like street names and landmarks. You can't always rely on your phone and GPS tools. And people, even your friends, can be unreliable.

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