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William Jensen's avatar

My friend & I were in Kobe Japan (our 1st of 3 business trips) in October 2004 and something similar happened. The hotel folks took our luggage & put it in a cab, and we ended up in a different cab. When we got out at the station to catch the bus to Kansai International, we looked at the cabbie (who didn't speak English) & gestured to open the trunk for our luggage. Obviously, no luggage. We were both totally freaking out. Through hand gestures, he figured something out, made a call, & 10 minutes later, our luggage shows up! THAT cabbie refused to take any money from us. It was nuts.

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Jenny Jordan's avatar

We are often taught to fear, fear, fear strangers, and surely there are dangers out there, but I have to say that far more often, when traveling, my own experiences show that many people are... normal humans with normal compassion and kindness.

In 1987, my parents had to travel internationally, with 24 hr layover in Amsterdam at Schipol with 4 small children. We had 12 suitcases and 6 carry-ons -- a traveling circus.

When we arrived in the middle of the night, my parents wanted to stash our luggage in lockers at the airport rather than haul all of it in a taxi to our hotel, but we had no guilder and none of the money change places in the airport were open.

A complete stranger helped us. Gave my dad coins for the lockers. Helped us find snacks. Lovely.

And that's hardly the only story that I have.

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