Getting on the bus is difficult. There is no concept of waiting in line here so it's basically first come, first serve with a lot of pushing and shoving involved. I kept telling myself that this is the weekend and I will be home soon to relax. I claimed my seat and took a sigh of relief. "I will be home soon." We were across the street from where I usually wait for the bus in the morning to take to the university. I wasn't in the mood to cross 2 streets crowded with cars so I figured that the bus will turn around up the hill and make it back down on the other side where I can walk through quiet side streets. Because in the mornings as I wait, I see a #52 bus on the other side of the street and a couple minutes later, a #52 bus comes down my street. I assumed wrong about the bus turning up the hill. I learned the hard and long way that #52 buses are several minutes apart from each other on their route so the bus I see across the street and the one that shortly appears down my road are not the same buses.
What was supposed to be a 3o-minute ride, turned out to be 2 hours. We never turned around to go back down my street, but just kept making turns taking me further and further from the place I live. At this point, I was freaking out inside. I got a good dose of Amman that day. Eventually, I was the last one on the bus and there was no way I was going to get off in an area I didn't know existed. Alhamdo lellah that my bus driver was nice and said my situation was not a problem. So I just chilled out in the front seat and talked a little with him about American and Jordan waiting for the bus to fill up.
As extremely annoyed as I was with this turn of events, it's important as a traveler in a foreign country to have a sense of humor and go ahead and be that awkward tourist roaming the streets.
For fun, I'll add some pictures about my daily walking routine to the bus stop:
good story and valuable lesson! I think harrowing transit experiences are required, it's like a study abroad badge of courage :)
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