Jeremiah is a grandpa of a man, a proud shuttle driver who is attentive to his riders while mentoring a future driver in the front passenger seat. Throughout the ride, he tells us a few interesting things about the areas we're driving through, like "They are building three bridges at once right here--not very smart in my opinion" and "Atlanta doesn't allow these 18-wheelers to go into the city, they have to use the Perimeter, so you won't see many big trucks from here on."
Before leaving Athens, while checking to make sure we were all buckled in, he asked for my phone. He held it up to tell us what he probably tells all his passengers: "See this thing here? How many of you drive?" (We all said yes) "Driving and these phones never go together--I've been driving all my life and I don't even want to tell you how many people I've seen hurt or killed cause of texting and driving."
I was unsteady yesterday, teary the way I always am on transition days. My feet were hurting so much I felt nauseous. I was wondering how I'd get out of the shuttle and how I'd manage my way-too-big suitcase in the airport. But this quintessentially grandfatherly black man helped me into the shuttle with a firm grip. A young man in the back row smiled warmly at me and helped me move my back pack and pocket book out of the way when the late last rider finally showed up.
Jeremiah teased the last rider, "Since you're late, you get to buy us all lunch."
Midway, he said, "I"m just thinking of what I'm going to order for lunch when Steve treats us all at the airport. Fried chicken maybe."
When we stopped at the North Terminal, he reached for my hand with that same tight grip. "Don't worry, Sweetheart, I got you."
I got you! When I'm feeling teary anyway, that's enough to almost make me cry.
In a world in a hurry, when we no longer meet each other or deliver each other to the gates like we used to in the old days, his slow easy kindness hearkened back to a past we'll likely never see again.
He reiterated it as I squeezed his hand going from the seat to the pavement, careful not to fall: "I got you covered--like a big ole blanket."
Arriving in and leaving Georgia were bookended by the kindness of strangers.
The student driver--even he who'd said almost nothing up to that point--said, "I hope to be the driver when you come back to Georgia."
My San Antonio Uber driver was a kind young man in the US for only two years, "an elementary teacher from Cuba where students respect their teachers so much and have good etiquette and manners." He was here with no family, no friends, hoping to master English and study to be a nurse.
I've met so many nurses and caretakers this week from other countries, parents who are working long hours to provide their children with better lives than they might have had "back home." What strikes me--but my Uber driver and I don't have enough time or mutual language fluency to go there--is how I always feel a need to apologize to new immigrants for the state of the country they've landed in.
I want to tell them about better times not so long ago. I hope he meets good people and makes a safe life for himself until this Trumpian nightmare of ICE and war, recklessness and cruelty, is over, when people of conscience and reason prevail and we can feel proud of our beautiful country again.















