South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Travels inspire singer’s writing

- Tribune Content Agency

While some musicians prefer to write their music quietly at home, Rain Perry said she needs to get away from her normal routines to get into the proper mindset as a songwriter.

“The only way for me to give myself the time and space to truly hash (my songs) out is to lock myself in a (new) room for a few days,” said Perry, who’s based out of California. “(My new record) ‘A White Album’ was particular­ly hard to write. I dealt with writer’s block like I’d never encountere­d before — maybe because we were all feeling so emotionall­y and mentally stuck during the pandemic, and maybe because writing about race in America is a fairly daunting thing to do. So I ended up going away to write several times. I’m lucky because my husband often travels for work and we have a ton of Marriott hotel points. The songs for ‘A White Album’ were written in a little cabin at Sierra Meadows near Yosemite, the Best Western in Bishop (California), the Four Points by Sheraton Ventura Harbor and the Ventura Beach Marriott.”

For more informatio­n about Perry and her music, check out her website www.rainperry.com. uled for 2020. Three weeks! We’ll be staying at a chateau in France with some friends, which it turns out is a very reasonably priced thing to do if you can get a big group. And we’ll spend a few days in Berlin, Amsterdam and Paris. We also plan to visit Krakow and make the trip to Auschwitz. It’s almost too awful to conceive that our visit to a site of such atrocities depends on the status of a war with many similariti­es raging just a few hours away.

The most important thing is to be humble and respectful. Just tread lightly and read the room. (Also,) traveling often brings a person to places where there has been a war or genocide, or where the people are not at liberty to speak freely about their government. You really have to be respectful and let the locals reveal what they want to say about any of these things.

I’ve been to Cambodia and to Chile — both (had) some of the most horrific war crimes of the 20th century. The name (of the late dictator Augusto) Pinochet didn’t come up with anyone we spoke with in Chile. But in Cambodia, everyone from tour guides, to tuk-tuk drivers, to people working at museums wanted to talk about the killing fields and tell stories of relatives who had perished. There was the sense of an urgent national push to get these things out in the open. Not so in some other places.

When it’s not too hot, I love going out to Joshua Tree and the 29 Palms area. I love the Eastern Sierra Nevada — one of the more desolate and gorgeous parts of California. The Yosemite Valley is one of the most special locations on earth. I live in one of the places that many people consider a favorite weekend getaway, so on the weekends I steer clear of jammed downtown Ojai and stay home.

The Patagonia region of Chile and Argentina looks so much like California, and the unpaved roads that wind through giant Estancias make it easy to blur your eyes and imagine California in the Rancho days.

Oh, I have lists! I’m a total packing nerd and try to be as minimalist as possible. Aside from the usual essentials, I have to have my knitting, and my Moleskine notebooks and my fancy Uniball pens.

For more from the reporter, visit www.jaehakim.com.

I’m so sorry to hear about your sister. You shouldn’t have to worry about chasing down a refund on your airline ticket at a time like this. Although your Frontier ticket was nonrefunda­ble, airlines make exceptions to their rules when there’s a death in the family. So Frontier should have reviewed your case and at least considered a refund for your ticket and the seat-assignment and baggage bundle you purchased.

Your case is a reminder that airline fees for advance boarding, luggage and seat assignment­s generally aren’t refundable.

Sometimes, even when you can get your ticket refunded, you can’t get the fees back. I’ve seen a few of those cases. So be extra careful when you pay airline fees. They can be a one-way ticket.

Call me old-fashioned, but I believe your airline ticket should include a confirmed seat assignment and luggage in the price you pay.

Charging extra for these basic amenities and making the fees nonrefunda­ble, which is fast becoming an airline industry standard, isn’t customer-friendly. But it is certainly profitable.

I think you might have had more luck by appealing your case to someone higher up at Frontier. A supervisor could have looked at your situation and authorized a refund. I list the names, numbers and email addresses for Frontier’s executives on my consumer advocacy site at www.elliott.org/ company-contacts/fron tier-airlines. Even though Frontier didn’t have to refund your fees, I thought they might want to take another look at your case. They did — and you got your money back.

Christophe­r Elliott is the chief advocacy officer of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps consumers resolve their problems. Elliott’s latest book is “How To Be The World’s Smartest Traveler” (National Geographic). Contact him at elliott.org/ help or chris@elliott.org.

 ?? ?? Singer-songwriter Rain Perry said she’s looking forward to visiting Krakow, Berlin and Amsterdam.
Singer-songwriter Rain Perry said she’s looking forward to visiting Krakow, Berlin and Amsterdam.

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