
In a moment of spontaneity, I came to DC , not knowing anything about the city, not knowing a single soul. I came here and decided that I would not hold myself back from anything and that I would enjoy every moment of this new experience and I was determined to make the best of this amazing opportunity. I would do things that I would never do back home…and that included using public transportation. This was a big adjustment that I had to make- from driving a convertible on my way to beach to riding a metro to Chinatown.
I tried to avoid the metro as long as I could (flashbacks of NY metro and vomit stains), but alas it was time. In reality my roommate forced me. I remember that day like it was yesterday. It was a bitter and cold winter day. The weather channel said it was 20 degrees but really with the wind, it felt like -13. I awoke that Saturday morning excited about the adventures in shopping that awaited at the mall. What I did not know then was that my roommate had a devious plan, and it involved tricking me into using the metro.
We came to the top of the escalator and I fearlessly walked the entire three miles down to the bottom of this escalator of death, past the crazy wind tunnel, (which on several other occasions has almost caused me Marilyn Monroe moments ) and went through the gate, barely escaping the jaws of death.
What I saw next completely shocked me. All around me, in every direction stood normal looking people. There were no poor homeless bums or gangbangers. In fact, I was greeted with approving nods, embracing gestures and warm smiles. I was part of a club now; I was a DC Metro Rider.
The first experience of riding the metro by yourself is so magical, so rewarding, there are no words that can capture the right emotion as you figure your way through the system and get to the right destination. I formed a bond with the red line; it was the Mecca of all the lines in DC. Things were going great… I was so genuinely happy.
Then something happened that changed the red line forever with consequences that are still felt today. June 23,2009- there was a major crash on the redline that killed nine people and injured dozens more. People lost their loved ones and so many were effected by this tragic event, including myself ( I just did not know it yet).
In no way am I trying to make a mockery of what happened … but that crash really changed the redline. It changed my relationship… I don’t recognize the redline anymore. They say tragedy has a way of bringing things together… but that was not the case here.
The honeymoon period was over. Gone were the days of fast rides and short lines. Instead I was faced with long unexpected delays and slower rides. The thrill and excitement was gone. And it even got worse after that. There were so many red flag warnings that I experienced on the redline. I lost my beloved pair of black heels. I lost my best friend Sherry when she came to visit me, when the metro door closed on me, leaving her on the metro car, by herself, not knowing where to go. And I nearly lost a hand when I pried the metro door open in order to not miss the first metro in over an hour of waiting.
Just when I was beginning to accept this new life, things just started to get even worse. Several suicides on the redline added more to the stress of the redline. This used to be a place that people came to for comfort and now it turned into a place people turned to take their own lives. With all of these tragedies came even more sad news… the redline would now be operating manually, as opposed to automatically. It is then that I knew… it was over. That the redline I knew and loved would never be the same, I would never get back what I had…it was over.
I still take the redline everyday to work because I have no option. I am not fully healed, I'm not sure if I ever will be. Sometimes I think about all the great memories I shared with the redline and where we would be if fate had not so ruthlessly pulled us apart. But in the end, I know it was meant to be and that there is a better line out there, I just have not found it yet.