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Rhode Island Roads
The online magazine of travel, life, dining, and entertainment for people who love Rhode Island |
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What Your Luggage Tells Others About You Flor Bonifacio
There are two fertile points where I do my luggage musings. The
first one is on departure as I queue up to check in my luggage
with the rest of the throng. The other is upon arrival as I
wait for my belongings in the luggage carousel.
Another easy to figure out luggage is the humongous backpack
carried by the globe-trotting young person out to experience
the world on a tight budget. Their backpacks are normally
double their size and weight and in them I would imagine would
be blankets not usually provided in cheap backpacker hostels
and pots and pans that might come in handy when they run out of
money and need to camp out for the night.
A hard one for me is the hard case Samsonite luggage and the
person that comes with it. They seem to fall into all sorts of
categories. They could be rich widows who are going to Europe
to while away their time and need a few Samsonite hard case
luggages with combination locks to secure their diamonds and
pearls.
Or they could be just like me who don't own any luggage for
myself but borrow from my Mother who happens to own a
handsome-looking golden hard case Samsonite luggage. I always
think that they would be infrequent travellers like me because
who would be sane enough to go more than twice a year carrying
a luggage that is heavier than what you would and could put in
them, wheels notwithstanding.
One type of luggage and owners that I spotted on my way out of
Sydney to Bangkok recently stood out from the rest however. The
set of bags were so worn out and dated and were a "mix bag" (pun
unintended) of soft imitation leather orange vinyls cracking at
the edges, as well as hard case luggages with patches of green
peering from the airport stickers - from Athens to Zaire -
plastered onto them. The owners seem to be as proud of their
bags as the lady next to them with her Louis Vuitton designer
label soft case with wheels luggage.
I must confess I have been tempted on a number of occasions to
strike up a casual conversation with the owners of these hard
to decipher luggages to confirm that my suspicions and mental
cataloguing are correct. But who wants to spoil the wonderful
world of fanciful fiction over the harsh reality of boring
facts. Not me. And not in the midst of all the rush and
enforced waiting in special places called airports.
About The Author: Flor Bonifacio is co-founder of
http://discount-luggage-samsonite.com/ - an online shopping
store offering savings of up to 80% on name-brand luggage
products.
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