Opinion

Notes on traveling by train during a pandemic

Sooner or later, we’re all going to have to ask: What am I willing to risk to see my loved ones right now? For me, it was Amtrak.

Advertisement

by

Mohammed Kloub

When the pandemic restrictions started in March, it had been only 2½ months since I had seen my family. Like most people, I didn’t think a once-in-a-lifetime disaster was about to make it dangerous to travel or see them.

I had last visited Vancouver, Washington — where I grew up and where my parents and two younger sisters still live — during the holidays in December. Any longer than three months apart is typically unacceptable for Arab parents, and even that’s a stretch. By the time June rolled around, I hadn’t been home in six months. I knew Mama would be expecting me soon.

I also knew, barring New Zealand taking over the United States, that COVID-19 was here to stay. So I finally had to ask myself the question we all might face before the end of this pandemic: What kind of risks am I willing to take to see my loved ones?

I don’t have a car because public transportation gets me where I need to go in Seattle, so I couldn’t drive home. I also ruled out taking a Greyhound or Bolt Bus because a bus feels like a fraternity basement on wheels. And airports? No thank you.

An Amtrak email let me know the company was operating trains again, with mask requirements and fewer seats sold to allow for social distancing. Public health experts say those are the two most important safety measures right now, so I made my choice.

I booked a Sunday-to-Sunday trip. The train south would be the Amtrak Cascades, which I knew well; I had taken it home plenty of times during my undergraduate days at the University of Washington. But with fewer trains running each day, the choices for the trip back north were either the Cascades at 8 a.m. or a 4 p.m. Coast Starlight, the big double-decker that travels all the way from Los Angeles — which means more geography covered, more stops, more people and more risks. Still, I booked that one so I wouldn’t have to get up early. We’re all human.

What follows are step-by-step accounts of each trip.

THE JOURNEY SOUTH

A selfie of the author, Moh, with a mask

THE RETURN JOURNEY NORTH

Back in my home, I think about a moment just before Tacoma when the train entered a pitch black tunnel. It took a while to pass through, much longer than I remembered it taking on the southbound journey. With so many people in close proximity, the dark felt more claustrophobic. And although the light wouldn’t protect me from the virus, I wanted it back.

The tunnel we’re all in right now will end eventually, too. But unlike my anxious self sitting on the train waiting, we can each take steps to help us escape this one — by wearing masks, keeping our distance and asking ourselves: What would I do to safely see my loved ones?

Correction: An earlier version of this essay misspelled the name of Gollum, originally a Stoorish Hobbit who was corrupted by the One Ring and spent most of his life in the Misty Mountains. Crosscut regrets the error.

Donation CTA
Mohammed Kloub

By Mohammed Kloub

Mohammed Kloub is formerly an audience engagement editor at Crosscut, where he looked for creative ways to connect the Seattle and Washington state communities with our storytelling. Before Crosscut,