Leaving a busy airport recently, I found myself in that liminal space—just past the baggage claim, just before the exit doors—where people wait.
It’s a space thick with emotions, where time slows just enough to let anticipation, anxiety, and longing settle into the creases of people’s faces. The voiceover in my head reminded me of an old sentiment: If you want to see human joy in its purest form, look at the faces of those waiting for loved ones to arrive. And yes, joy was there—undeniable in the tight embraces and relieved smiles. But what struck me more was the other side of waiting, the emotions that don’t make it into sentimental montages.
I watched a woman clutching a bouquet, her too-wide smile stretched across her face like a mask. Was it an attempt to disguise nerves? Or was she bracing herself for a reunion long overdue, one where scripted pleasantries might be safer than the truth?
A man in a tailored suit stood near her, shifting his weight, eyes darting toward the exit. He wasn’t just waiting—he was rehearsing. I recognized that expression. It’s the look of someone preparing to greet an uncertainty. Would the person stepping through those doors bring comfort or confrontation? Love rekindled or a final farewell?
Nearby, a pair of young eyes brimmed with unspoken words. A teenager, perhaps waiting for a parent they hadn’t seen in years. There was hope, but also hesitation—a kind of emotional muscle memory, conditioned by past disappointments.
Airports are strange theaters of human experience, where arrivals and departures aren’t just logistical markers but emotional thresholds. Every embrace at Arrivals is a victory against distance, but every farewell at Departures carries the weight of an unknown return. Some people rush toward their loved ones as if time apart had been unbearable. Others take a beat before stepping forward, as if the person they’re about to meet has changed just enough to require reintroduction.
The byline of life, it turns out, isn’t just written in joyful reunions. It’s in the pauses, the uncertain smiles, the deep breaths before first words. It’s in the questions hovering between people who once knew each other well. Will it be the same? Have I changed? Have they?
We think of waiting as passive, but in reality, it’s when we do our deepest feeling. And maybe that’s why the emotions in that small airport corridor felt so raw—because in those moments, before the embrace, before the handshake, before the scripted words spill out—we are unguarded. We are in-between. We are human.