BART Connects: A working mom fondly remembers her down time on BART

Last Updated On Jan. 16, 2024

Linda Healey took BART to work for more than twenty years. When her son was young, those daily BART rides were her only downtime in the day.  

“BART got me home to my child quickly,” she said. “And it got me home unstressed because I could relax rather than sit in traffic. That was a gift.”  

Now retired, Healey still looks back fondly on her BART commute. Each morning, Healey would walk about ten minutes from her home to Walnut Creek Station, where she’d board a San Francisco-bound train.  

During the ride, she finally had a few minutes to read, and she treasured that time. She alternated between the classics and pure “pleasure reading,” from Finnegan’s Wake to Agatha Christie. Thirty minutes or so later, she’d disembark at one of the Market Street stations in San Francisco and head to work for the day at a large financial institution.  

Healey still takes BART to those same stations, but nowadays, her destination is mostly dinner or the theatre, her lifelong passion. In the eighties, she said she took BART to see the original touring casts of classics like Cats, Phantom of the Opera, and Les Misérables. She’s especially grateful for BART’s Senior Clipper card, which gets her 62.5% off her fare.  

One of Healey’s most treasured BART memories doesn’t involve her commute or theatergoing. Eleven years ago, she met a 21-year-old Italian woman on a train who was traveling alone. Her name was Stefania, and she couldn’t remember which station she was supposed to meet her aunt at, but knew she lived in Danville. Healey suspected Walnut Creek was their meeting place.  

BARTPhoto courtesy of BART.

The two women struck up a conversation, and Healey learned Stefania lived in Lucca, Tuscany, and was staying with her aunt for 29 days to practice her English. Healey was charmed by her wit and “beautiful Italian accent.” They chatted the entire way.  

When they got to Walnut Creek Station, Healey made Stefania a deal. She would walk home, wait a few minutes, and then return to the station in her car to make sure Stefania had been picked up. Healey told her, “If you’re still there when I get back, I’ll drive you to your aunt’s place.” She returned a half hour later, but Stefania was nowhere to be found. 

The two women kept up a correspondence, with Healey sometimes helping Stefania with her English class homework. In the decade since, Healey has watched Stefania fall in love, get married, and have a child. She sends Healey baby pictures now. Healey hopes to meet the family in Italy one day.  

“We were at such different points in our lives,” Healey said. “But we just hit it off on BART. It never would have happened if it weren’t for that train ride. I really scored.”  

Healey intends to visit Stefania in Tuscany in the near future. She’ll take BART to the airport, as she always does.  

Today, Healey’s son – now in his thirties and living in Oakland – does the same commute his mother did for so many years, though he hops on the train a few stops up the line. He even works for the same company.  

“I passed the BART baton to him,” Healey said. “Hopefully one day, he’ll get to take it just for fun.”  

BARTPhoto courtesy of BART.

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