Aligned & Awake: The Unintentional Community of Carriage 4
A couple of hours on a train and the strange intimacy of watching humanity unfold seat by seat.
Aligned & Awake
My reflections on life through travel, human design, energy, astrology, and emotional clarity. Not as a guru. Just one person figuring it out in real time.
There’s a strange sort of intimacy that happens on trains. You’re packed into a moving metal tube with strangers you’ll likely never meet again, yet somehow, in forty-five minutes, you learn more about them than you know about some relatives you’ve tolerated for decades.
Take today’s carriage. Carriage 4, the accidental social experiment nobody consented to and yet here we are. A couple has brought a suitcase the size of a suburban townhouse and parked it beside them, blocking the aisle like it pays rent. Every person who squeezes past makes a face, a comment, or an exhale that sounds suspiciously like a curse. The couple looks offended. As if the suitcase had acted alone, rolling into the aisle in a fit of rebellion, rebuffed only by their noble attempts at managing its chaos.
Across from them is a group of twenty-somethings, or maybe thirty-somethings. Honestly, with the hair extensions and lip fillers, guessing ages has become a dangerous sport. They’re loud, laughing, probably a drink in, and having a marvellous time. The type of joy that spreads like wildfire, unless you’re one of the passengers who believes happiness should only be experienced in private, preferably on silent mode.
A woman behind me is broadcasting a phone conversation at full volume, confident her life is so compelling we should all be taking notes. I now know that Dave, bless him, still hasn’t decided between fish and chips or curry for dinner. It’s Friday night, after all. The nation waits.
And this is the first ten minutes.
Further down, an elderly man is doing a crossword in a real newspaper, as if the digital revolution never happened and he opted out. He’s unbothered by the chaos around him, existing in a serene bubble of ink and concentration. He hasn’t looked up once, not even when the train jolted, and the rest of us briefly reconsidered our mortality.
Across the aisle, a young teen couple alternates between kissing, giggling, and scrolling on their phones. A modern love story told through Snapchat filters and intermittent eye contact. Their laughter comes in bursts, as if their romance were narrated by TikTok sound effects.
Then there are the sleepers. People who knock out instantly, as if the train holds magical powers. Their heads bob, their mouths fall open, and some of them look as though they’re praying to wake up in a better timeline. I understand completely.
These little vignettes fascinate me. Each one is a tiny window into the human condition, wrapped in a coat and wedged into a standard-issue seat.
A train is a temporary world—a tiny ecosystem crammed with humans doing their best or their loudest for a little while. We don’t know each other’s stories. For the duration of this ride, our lives run parallel. We breathe the same recycled air. We negotiate the awkward dance of eye contact and personal space. We observe each other’s quirks, flaws, joys, and blind spots, all without ever exchanging names.
That is why trains fascinate me. They remind me that everyone is carrying something: a suitcase, a story, a heartbreak, a hope. Some burdens block the aisle. Some crack us open in laughter. Some lull us into sleep so deep we briefly transcend this mortal plane. When you really look, you realize we are not that different from the strangers we silently judge. We are all trying to get somewhere, finding ways to stay human along the way.
Oh and by the way, Dave is having curry for dinner.
Tell me…
Who is your favourite type of public transport character? The joyous group, the phone broadcaster, the aisle blocker, the crossword king?
Add yours below.



This is why I love the London tube so much, because you all sit opposite each other and can make eye contact. Honestly, I love to see the elderly lady in the subway, the one who is in her own thoughts and ones she notices you and you smile at her, smiles back :)