A delightful train ride

A delightful train ride
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This Thanksgiving week, I took a four hour train trip from Boston to New York. Sitting behind me were two older ladies. They didn't know each other and they just ended up sitting together and they talked and talked for that four hours. I know their whole stories, I know their names, I know about their kids and I loved every minute of it. I almost wish I had taped it.

I won't mention their names, but I know them now, after hearing them talk for all that time. One lady is 82 and one is 83. One is from Manchester, England one is from Rhode Island, they had both lived in New Jersey at one time and both were on their way back to New Jersey to be with family for Thanksgiving.

The lady from Rhode Island talked and sounded just like Cyndi Lauper. Exactly. The lady from Manchester had that refined English accent and you can imagine these two accents going back and forth sharing their lives with each other. Cyndi Lauper was nervy and the most talkative. She asked a lot of personal questions, and Manchester calmly answered.

Manchester has two children, one in Washington DC and one in New Jersey, I think she said she lives in Boston now. Rhode Island has five children and nine grandchildren, they live all over and I don't remember where she lives now.

They spoke about their husbands who have both passed, Manchester's husband passed 10 years ago, Rhode Island's husband passed nine years ago to the exact day we were on the train. Cyndi Lauper was very into her husband’s life, it was more about him than her, and it seemed to be a man’s world according to her questions. She asked Manchester what her husband did for a living, rather than asking Manchester what she did. Manchester’s husband did many things, including real estate, to which Cyndi Lauper said, “Oh you must have made a lot of money!” to which Manchester calmly said, “No, just enough to live on.”

Cyndi Lauper’s husband was a highly regarded college professor. It was a hectic life being a professor’s wife, according to Cyndi Lauper.

They spoke of World War II and of all of the places they have been and lived. They spoke of the Royal Family. Neither of them like Camila, Cyndi Lauper doesn't like Charles, but Manchester says he is not a bad sort.

Manchester came to the US in the 1960s. She said that period of time was a “brain drain” where all the good minds from England moved to the states. She eventually became a citizen with her husband in Elizabeth, New Jersey, they lived in that county at the time and that was the county seat and the location for the citizenship ceremony

The conversation was fascinating. And the thought of these two older grandmas traveling alone together was nice. When the first met, Cyndi Lauper told Manchester that she was nervous about traveling alone, getting on the wrong train and all but Manchester said, "We'll you're on the train now and the only thing to do is get off when it's time. That's it."

Cyndi Lauper had her son picking her up at the train station and Manchester had her daughter-in-law picking her up at the train station. Manchester said the first thing she wanted to do once she was settled at her son's and daughter-in-law's house was to have a hot cup of tea. She said, "When she asks if I want anything [meaning her daughter-in-law], I will say 'yes,' a hot cup of tea!"

I did not look back at them the whole time, I didn't want to spoil the image I had in my head of them. But when my stop came, NYC, I had to get up and leave, so I looked back and there they were, sitting and staring at me. I just stared back, I didn't want to be rude but I wanted to take them in. Neither was what I had pictured in my head and I almost wish I had not looked.

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