Authors: Unknown
And traveling is hard. It’s stressful, and people get ugly. I tried really hard to keep that vision and to smile and be kind, even in the face of meanness.
But I hit bottom one day when I had a passenger who had a heart attack on my flight. He was lying in the aisle, and we had opened his shirt and had the pads of the defibrillator on him. I was holding an oxygen bottle.
And this woman in the row sitting next to me kept tugging on my blouse: “Excuse me. Excuse me!”
I was like, “Just a minute, please. We’re trying to save this guy’s life.”
She kept tugging and tugging, and I said, “Just a minute! JUST A MINUTE!”
And then I thought:
Wait a minute. Maybe
she
has an emergency, or maybe she knows something.
So I said, “What is it?”
And she held up her coffee cup and said, “This coffee is cold.”
And I learned that
people
can be cold.
There’s also something that happens to your psychology because you see the world from above when you fly a lot. And I saw a lot of really horrible things from the air, like devastating California forest fires, New Orleans under water, and most upsetting for me, lower Manhattan smoldering for weeks and weeks.
And in late September of 2001, I was working a flight, and a passenger came on with a garbage bag, which is kind of a flight attendant pet peeve, because, “Really, sir, a garbage bag? Fourteenth Street, $9.99. Get a roll-aboard.” You know? But you see that. Sometimes people just throw things in a garbage bag and bring it on.
So he goes to row two, which is where he was seated, and he opened the overhead bin and put the garbage bag in.
And my next thought was:
What’s in that garbage bag?
Because in late September of ’01, we were all still a little edgy and paranoid, so I was kind of keeping my eye on him and the bag. And he put it in the overhead bin and closed the bin and stood there with his hand on it, guarding it.
Which is another flight attendant pet peeve. The overhead bins are shared space, okay? And if you hog up all the space, somebody’s bag is gonna get checked. And by the way, if you’re in row twelve, please don’t leave your bag in row one.
It’s not nice.
You’re taking somebody’s space.
So my instinct was to go up to this man and say, “Sir, please sit down.”
But I thought:
Just let it go. Just smile and be kind, and if we need the space, I’ll deal with it later.
So I didn’t say anything.
I also didn’t say anything when he got up while the seat belt sign was on and came and stood, waiting for the bathroom. If the seat belt sign is on, it’s because the captain knows something we don’t know, okay? And it might not feel bumpy, but he’s
probably heard from an airplane further out that there’s turbulence ahead. I have a friend who broke his ankle on the ceiling on a smooth flight. So that’s another flight attendant pet peeve.
He stood there, waiting for the bathroom, and I said, “Sir, the seat belt sign is on.”
He said, “I know, I know, but I really need to go.”
And again I thought:
Let it go. Just let it go.
I was sitting on the jump seat, and it was kinda awkward because he was just standing there, and I felt like I should say something.
So I said, “Are you traveling for business or pleasure?”
And he said, “Neither. I live in California, but I came to New York because my son was a first responder at Ground Zero, and he died there. I came to pick up his uniform, which is all I have of him, and it’s in a bag in the overhead bin.”
And I remembered why I was there, and why I was hired and why I wanted that job. Because I remembered that everybody has a story, and I don’t know what that story is. People fly for a reason. Maybe they’re going to a funeral or to see someone who’s sick, or maybe it’s something joyful, like a wedding. I don’t know what their story is, but for that little piece of time, I’m a part of it, and I have an impact on their experience.
And what I love about performing is taking a group of individuals and, through a shared emotional experience, turning it into a collective. But my job as a flight attendant is to take a
collective
and to turn it
back
into a group of individuals.
Flight attendants talk about “crowds” sometimes, like, “Avoid the Fort Lauderdale crowd. They’re horrible,” or “Avoid the Long Beach crowd.”
But every crowd is a group of individuals, and every individual has a story. And yeah, I saw a lot of horrible things from
the air. But I’ve also seen a lot of amazing, beautiful things from the air, like the Grand Canyon, the Northern Lights, fireworks
from above
.
And now when I go through the cabin with my garbage bag, saying “thank you” and smiling, I mean it, because I’m making a gratitude list in my head. And every time I say, “thank you,” I think of something I’m grateful for:
“Thank you” (for my job). “Thank you” (for these comfy shoes). “Thank you” (for my life). Because my job enables me to be part of something bigger than me, and to be connected to other people, like this. So thank you.
Faye Lane
is a writer and performer whose unique blending of story and song moved
New York Magazine
to gush, “She had them gobbling from the palm of her hand. They were howling, crying, falling in love with her.” Her critically acclaimed solo show,
Faye Lane’s Beauty Shop Stories
, a chronicle of her childhood in a Texas beauty salon, was born on the Moth stage and was the recipient of the 2010 Overall Excellence Award from the New York International Fringe Festival, the 2011 Bistro Award for Best Musical Comedy, and the 2011 MAC Award for Outstanding Special Production. The show has an ongoing residency at the legendary SoHo Playhouse in New York and has touched audiences across the country and around the world. Winner of The Moth StorySLAM in both New York and Los Angeles, Faye is a frequent contributor to
The Moth Radio Hour
and Mainstage. In addition to touring with her solo show, Faye uses storytelling as the basis for corporate motivational presentations and writing and performing workshops. For more information, please visit www.FayeLane.com.
MIKE DESTEFANO
W
hen I was a kid, I wanted to get a Harley really bad. I was about seven, and I was in my dad’s car in the back, and these dudes were driving by on these Harleys.
I remember looking at them, and thinking,
I want to do that, man, you know? I want to be free like those guys.
And I then started doing heroin a few years later, so I couldn’t really get a bike. I couldn’t get toothpaste and shit, you know, let alone a $15,000 motorcycle.
When I was eighteen my parents found me in the house, overdosed, almost dead. They took me to a hospital, and then they took me to a detox, and then to a rehab.
When I was in the rehab, I met Fran. She was a beautiful, beautiful girl. The first time I saw her, I was just, like, wow—amazed. And we became really close, and we went through the rehab. She had been there a long time before me, and she was finishing up, and then I finished, and we started dating.
And life was pretty good, you know? It was hard to get off of heroin, but I was able to do it. I went to college, and Franny and I were together and dating and just having a good time.
One day she had a really bad fever. I took her to the hospital, and twelve hours later they said that she had pneumocystic pneumonia. I didn’t know what it was. They said it was from AIDS. I didn’t know what to do. I loved her, and I wanted to be with her.
New York got her sick a lot. She’d cough a lot and had bronchitis all the time, so we moved to Florida. Like when old people move down there. We went down to retire. I figured that we would live as much as we could. I just wanted to make her life the greatest life.
We got married. We used to go out for dinners and stuff. She wanted to go out, I would take her out. She’d have her oxygen tank with her, and I’d take her to a restaurant, and I’d look around and I’d see another couple with the husband taking care of the wife. But they were eighty, you know? We were twenty.
I thought the warm air down there would help her heal and feel better, but it didn’t. She went into the hospital one night, and the next morning the doctor told me that she had pneumonia again, they couldn’t really cure it, and she might have a few weeks to live.
I was devastated, and she was devastated. They put her in hospice. But two weeks later, they sent her out of the hospice because she started to get better.
She was thrown out of hospice for not dying.
Only she could have pulled that off. She was a young Italian girl, and she was not interested in suffering and dying. Like, who is? But she was extra not fucking into it.
A few weeks later, she got sick again. I took her back to the hospital. They put her in.
Doctor told me the same thing: “A few weeks, and she’s gonna be gone.”
So they put her back in hospice. A month and a half later, they sent her home again. Our families—my parents, her parents—were happy about it.
Oh, she’s gonna be better.
But I knew how the story was gonna end.
A few weeks later, she ends up back in the hospital. And on Thursday of that week, my motorcycle—my Harley-Davidson—was ready to be picked up. So I went that Thursday to get the bike. And it was beautiful. She was in the hospital, and I got a call that she went back to hospice. So I drove the bike over to the hospice, and I didn’t know what to do. Should I show her the bike? What the fuck do you do?
I brought the bike out front, and I went into the room, and I said, “Franny, I want to show you something,” and I brought her outside and showed her the bike.
And she was mad.
She was like, “What the fuck is that?” I brought it to her ’cause it was our dream together, and she was still very important to me, and I just thought that would make her happy. But it didn’t.
So the social worker came over to me and said, “Mike, people are never dying. They
live
and then they
die
. And dying is in a moment. She feels that you’re treating her as if she’s dying, and you don’t need her anymore. You don’t love her anymore.”
That wasn’t the truth. I told her every day. But I went home, and I came back to the hospice, and I brought a few of my work shirts with me because she loved ironing for me.
I came back a couple hours later, and my shirts were all ironed, and she was walking around the hospice, dusting, like she would clean the place up. She was on a lot of morphine and—some of you that never did it—it’s wonderful. It makes you feel excited about things.
So she saw me, and she’s like, “Where’s the bike?” Everything I wanted her to feel in the beginning, she now felt. Because I asked her to iron my clothes.
And I said, “It’s outside. Let’s go see,” and I took her out.
She said, “Let me sit on it.” So I put her on it.
And then she said, “Can you start it up?”
So I start the bike up, and it’s rumbling. It was a loud bike. It was gorgeous.
And then she says, “Well, can you just take me for a little ride? Just around the parking lot here?”
And I’m like,
Fuck.
I’m thinking she’s gonna fall off the back, and I’m gonna have to tell her family,
Yeah, she almost died of AIDS. But then I killed her on my bike.
So now we’re riding around the hospice, and she’s got the morphine pole dragging next to her.
And we’re junkies, you know? We were different. We were fucking freaks. People crossed the street when they saw me. And her. She was a
prostitute
. She was a fucking drug addict. I mean all the shit that—you know what I’m talking about, some of you—I can tell.
So this was amazing, you know? We’re riding around this hospice with this morphine pole fucking dangling. And all the staff comes out, and they’re watching us, and they’re cheering us on.
And then I hear the pole fall. And I think she fell off the back, but, no, she unhooked the morphine bag, which means, “I want to go out on the street a little bit.”
So I take her out on the street a little bit. And then she just put her arm around my belly and started rubbing, and she said, “Can we go on the highway?”
And I thought of all that we’d been through and all the suffering.
And I said, “Yeah, we could do that.”
So we got on I-95. And I had it up to eighty. And she was just screaming with happiness. Morphine bag was flapping over her head.
And that wind—I always imagined the wind on a bike making you feel free, you know? It’s so powerful. And for ten minutes we were normal, and that wind just blew all the death off of us.
I promised her when she died that for the rest of my life I was gonna live for her. I mean,
really live
.
But nothing I’ll ever do will ever be that grand again.
Mike DeStefano
was a stand-up comic who overcame personal torment and drug addiction to become a regular at all the top clubs in New York City. He could be heard on Sirius Satellite Radio, and appeared on numerous television networks including Comedy Central, Showtime, and NBC. He was a featured comic at both HBO’s U.S. Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen, and the Just for Laughs Comedy Festival in Montreal.
Time Out New York
called him a “Must-see… gruff, candid, and unflinching.” His one-man show,
A Cherry Tree in the Bronx
, opened to critical acclaim. Mike died of a heart attack on May 6, 2011, at the age of forty-four. A documentary celebrating his life is in the works—about how Mike found the ability to rise from addiction, look himself in the mirror, and laugh at his pain in front of the whole world, and show those who are still suffering that they can always recover, and when they do, they can do great things. Learn more at www.mikedestefanomovie.com.
STORYTELLER | STORY TITLE | DIRECTOR | STORY PREMIERE |
---|---|---|---|
Janna Levin | Life on a Möbius Strip | Catherine Burns | June 4, 2011 Dark Night: Stories of Stars Aligned, Part of the World Science Festival @ The Players, New York, NY |
George Lombardi | Mission to India | Meg Bowles | May 31, 2012 Too Close to the Sun: Stories of Flash Points, Part of the World Science Festival @ The Great Hall at Cooper Union, New York, NY |
Andrew Solomon | Notes on an Exorcism | Catherine Burns | October 29, 2008 Guts: Stories from the Razor’s Edge @ The Players, New York, NY |
Alan Rabinowitz | Man and Beast | Catherine Burns | October 17, 2005 Hear Ye, Hear Ye? Lost in Translation Stories @ The New York Public Library, New York, NY |
Jillian Lauren | The Prince and I | Meg Bowles | February 9, 2012 Heart of Darkness: Stories of Love and War @ The Great Hall at Cooper Union, New York, NY |
A. E. Hotchner | The Day I Became a Matador | Catherine Burns | March 16, 2012 Moved: Stories of Safe Passage @ The Players, New York, NY |
Damien Echols | Life After Death | Meg Bowles | July 11, 2012 Eyewitness: Stories from the Front @ The Players, New York, NY |
Ari Handel | Don’t Fall in Love with Your Monkey | Catherine Burns | June 16, 2004 Blinded by Science: Stories of the Ologies @ The Players, New York, NY |
Anoid Latipovna Rakhmatyllaeva | Tajik Sonata | Catherine Burns and Mike Daisey | August 12, 2008 When Worlds Collide @ Padida Theater, Dushanbe, Tajikistan |
Joe Lockhart | Impeachment Day | Lea Thau | February 12, 2005 Out on a Limb: Stories from the Edge @ Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, CO |
Wayne Reece | Easter in a Texas Roadhouse | Catherine Burns | October 21, 2010 OMG: Stories of the Sacred @ The New York Public Library, New York, NY |
Richard Price | Bicycle Safety on Essex | Catherine Burns | January 22, 2008 Off the Map: Stories of Confabulated Geography @ The Players, New York, NY |
Jon Levin | Elevator ER | Catherine Burns | June 21, 2006 Sick: Stories about Maladies and Medicine @ The Players, New York, NY |
Annie Duke | The Big Things You Don’t Do | Sarah Austin Jenness | September 12, 2013 Public Radio Program Directors Conference @ The Las Vegas Hotel Casino and Resort, Las Vegas, NV |
Michael Massimino | A View of the Earth | Meg Bowles | November 14, 2012 Around the Bend: Stories of Coming Home, Part of the World Science Festival @ The Great Hall at Cooper Union, New York, NY |
Kimberly Reed | Life Flight | Jenifer Hixson | March 16, 2011 Between Worlds: Stories of Passing @ The Players, New York, NY |
Darryl “DMC” McDaniels | Angel | Catherine Burns and Lea Thau | April 13, 2007 Stories of Comedy and Calamity @ The Rose O’Neill Literary House at Washington College, Chestertown, MD |
George Dawes Green | The House That Sherman Didn’t Burn | Catherine Burns | January 23, 2009 In Harm’s Way: Stories About Danger @ The Players, New York, NY |
Sherman “O.T.” Powell | Cocktails in Attica | Catherine Burns | June 28, 2011 Big Night: The Moth at Central Park SummerStage @ Rumsey Playfield, New York, NY |
Ed Gavagan | Whatever Doesn’t Kill Me | Catherine Burns and Maggie Cino | February 17, 2011 Building a Bridge: Stories from Both Sides @ Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland, OR |
Adam Gopnik | LOL | Catherine Burns | December 13, 2006 Feeding the Hand That Bites You: Stories About Parenthood @ The Players, New York, NY |
Marvin Gelfand | Liberty Card | Lea Thau | October 23, 2002 American Myths: Stories of US @ The Players, New York, NY |
Paul Nurse | Discussing Family Trees in School Can Be Dangerous | Catherine Burns | June 12, 2009 Matter: Stories of Atoms and Eves @ The Players, New York, NY |
Steve Osborne | The Mug Shot | Catherine Burns | May 21, 2009 Crack Up: Stories about Comedies and Calamities @ Symphony Space, New York, NY |
Erin Barker | Good News Versus Bad | Jenifer Hixson | February 9, 2012 Heart of Darkness: Stories of Love and War @ The Great Hall at Cooper Union, New York, NY |
Edgar Oliver | The Apron Strings of Savannah | Catherine Burns | January 25, 2006 Last Exit: Stories about Endings @ The Players, New York, NY |
Ellie Lee | A Kind of Wisdom | Catherine Burns | December 11, 2008 It Takes Two to Tango @ Metabolic Studio, Los Angeles, CA |
Carly Johnstone | A Perfect Circle | Jenifer Hixson | July 11, 2012 Eyewitness: Stories from the Front @ The Players, New York, NY |
Sebastian Junger | War | Sarah Austin Jenness | July 11, 2012 Eyewitness: Stories from the Front @ The Players, New York, NY |
Andy Christie | We’ll Have to Stop Now | Catherine Burns | June 21, 2006 Sick: Stories about Maladies and Medicine @ The Players New York, NY |
Malcolm Gladwell | Her Way | Catherine Burns | May 21, 2009 Crack Up: Stories of Comedies and Calamities @ Symphony Space, New York, NY |
Cynthia Riggs | The Case of the Curious Codes | Sarah Austin Jenness | August 13, 2012 Big Night: The Moth on Martha’s Vineyard @ Union Chapel, Martha’s Vineyard, MA |
Ophira Eisenberg | The Accident | Catherine Burns | December 13, 2006 Feeding the Hand That Bites You: Stories about Parenthood @ The Players, New York, NY |
Ted Conover | Sing Sing Tattoo | Joey Xanders | June 28, 2000 On the Road Again: An Evening of Traveling Stories @ The Yankee Clipper, New York, NY |
Matthew McGough | My First Day with the Yankees | Lea Thau | May 28, 2003 Wheeling and Dealing: Stories about the Business of Doing Business @ The Players, New York, NY |
Jeffery Rudell | Under the Influence | Lea Thau | January 28, 2003 Under the Influence: The Powers That Shape and Shake Us @ The New York Public Library, New York, NY |
Elna Baker | Yes Means Yes? | Catherine Burns | June 7, 2006 Cat Out of Bag: Stories about Confessions @ The Players, New York, NY |
James Braly | One Last Family Photo | Catherine Burns | January 25, 2006 Last Exit: Stories about Endings @ The Players, New York, NY |
Tristan Jimerson | A Dish Best Served Cold | Sarah Austin Jenness | November 11, 2011 When Worlds Collide: Stories from the Clash @ The Fitzgerald Theater, St. Paul, MN |
Aimee Mullins | A Work in Progress | Sarah Austin Jenness | December 6, 2010 A More Perfect Union: Stories of Prejudice and Power @ The New York Public Library, New York, NY |
Nathan Englander | Unhooked | Catherine Burns | September 21, 2012 Driven: Stories of Shifting Gears @ The Players, New York, NY |
Wanda Bullard | The Small Town Prisoner | Joey Xanders | July 23, 2009 Coming Home @ The Telfair Museum, Savannah, GA |
Kemp Powers | The Past Wasn’t Done with Me | Meg Bowles | July 11, 2012 Eyewitness: Stories from the Front @ The Players, New York, NY |
Jenny Allen | Hair Today Gone Tomorrow | Catherine Burns | April 30, 2011 The Moth at the PEN World Voices Festival: What Went Wrong? @ The Great Hall at Cooper Union, New York, NY |
Joyce Maynard | The One Good Man | Catherine Burns and Joey Xanders | December 9, 2005: Under the Influence @ The Long Wharf Theatre, New Haven, CT |
Stephanie Summerville | Life Support | Catherine Burns | February 22, 2007 Save Me: Stories about Rescue and Redemption @ The Players, New York, NY |
Jenifer Hixson | Where There’s Smoke | Catherine Burns | October 22, 2003 Blue in the Face: Stories about Smoke @ The Players, New York, NY |
Brian Finkelstein | Perfect Moments | Catherine Burns | March 1, 2012 Rush: Stories of Ticking Clocks @ Royce Hall at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA |
Faye Lane | Fireworks from Above | Catherine Burns | February 17, 2011 Building a Bridge: Stories from Both Sides @ Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland, OR |
Mike DeStefano | Franny’s Last Ride | Catherine Burns | March 3, 2007 When Worlds Collide @ The St. Regis Aspen Resort, Aspen, CO |