A ‘Daddy-Daughter Honor Flight’

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Editor’s note: Princeton resident Elaine Russell accompanied her father on an Honor Flight. Prior to the trip, Russell told of her anticipation. The following guest commentary tells of the trip and emotional impact it made on her and her father.

For the first time in my life, it was I who gently touched his shoulder at 3 a.m. and awakened him for the “Journey of a Lifetime.” I could not help but remember all those many years ago when he was my 4 a.m. alarm getting me up to do chores before heading off to school. It was finally time for our “Daddy-Daughter Honor Flight!”

We arrived at the airport by 4:45 a.m. Central Time, and as they promised, we were in the air by 6:15 a.m. heading for Washington, D.C. This is where his importance elevated, and I, as promised, started a very long day. His compromised mobility allowed for his travel to be in First Class with a window seat, while I was directed somewhere in the back of the plane. This was the only time we were separated, and I could see a little disappointment on his face. However, after a sausage croissant, coffee and juice, we landed in Washington, D.C., 9 a.m. Eastern Time. 

It is an hour and 15 minute sprint to deplane, get in a restroom break, secure a comfortable wheelchair, board our bus and head to the World War II Memorial. We are a color-coded T-shirt crew of 71 World War II veterans (blue); seven Korean veterans (yellow); and 73 guardians; one nurse; two medical (green). Our caravan of buses is also color coded. The Liberty is red; the Freedom is blue; and the Justice is white.  Guardian’s lanyards are color coded to match the bus, and we get the blue Freedom bus, It works! You can tell they have done this before.

Of all the individuals I encountered on our trip, it turns out that our bus driver, Ray, was the most important to me. Our bus was equipped to raise and lower two veterans in their wheelchairs on and off the bus at every stop. My father filled one of those seats.  This, I will tell you, has not been perfected. It is a tight squeeze, and the easiest way to get the wheelchairs in place to be locked to the floor, is to just pick them up. Ray requires that a guardian be in the bus with the wheelchair and one on the ground for when they are lowered. It became a tag team effort between Melinda and I to raise and lower our fathers on and off the bus ... always with Ray’s help.

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