Sunday, September 18, 2011

Saravana Bhavan Bay Area: And the saga continues...

I have documented my experiences with the Hotel Saravana Bhavan franchise here. Thanks to my past experiences, I have remained aloof from their culinary offerings in spite of being based in the Bay Area and having taken up residence within a few miles from their Sunnyvale outlet. I mean, why bother when there are like half a dozen other places that don't manage to get under my skin as easily as HSB does.

But this don't-go-don't-get pissed off policy of mine was blown last weekend when my dear friend K (who finds honorable mentions here and here and who blogs here) drove into the Bay Area from LA with his wife. Now, K has his roots in KK Nagar, Chennai, a stone's throw from one of the earliest HSB restaurants, if not the earliest. Even after living in the US of A for over 10 years now, there is still enough KK Nagar blood coursing through his veins. So he owes his allegiances to the LA Lakers and HSB in no particular order and makes no bones about it too. In other words, while many see Saravana Bhavan as a restaurant, it is a venerated temple of food in his eyes. So even as he was crossing San Luis Obispo, a good 200 miles from my apartment, he announced loudly that we would be having dinner at Saravana Bhavan. Of course!

So when he was about 10 minutes away, he alerted me and I reluctantly drove down to their restaurant, not sure what lay in store. He pulled in around the same time and after the exchange of pleasantries, we entered at 9:52 pm (car clock). Their official closing time on Fridays, according to their website, was 10:30pm, leaving us with a clear 40 minutes of chow time. Plenty, if you ask me, for a casual desi dinner.

There were no ushers in sight nor were any guests waiting to be seated; this was after the wave of diners had faded away for the night. I approached the guy at the cash counter, the only employee that was around, and asked if we could seat ourselves. He specifically asked us to find an empty table in the far section of the restaurant as the other section was being serviced. Sure, no problem. We threaded our way through the diners to an empty and cleaned table for four. Just as we were getting settled, out comes this lady with an attitude.

"Who asked you to sit here?" Apparently, HSB specializes in cold appetizers served with a side of attitude.

"Well, the chrome dome at the cash counter did. Why?"

"We are closing this section now and you will need to be waited to be seated."

"But he specifically asked me to find a seat in this section."

"No."

Conversation was not her strong suite and she being the usher, somehow felt the need to show who wore the pants in the house.

HSB: 1 Slowelectron: 0

So we got up deliberately and moved back to the empty guest waiting chairs. Remember that scene from the movie Meet the Parents where Ben Stiller is forced by the ground staff to wait his turn to board an airplane in an empty gate? Just like that. Anyways, after a few long minutes ticked by, she emerged from somewhere with a clutch of menu cards. We followed her to a table right next to the one we were previously sitting at! Great!

KJ, who, probably because of the long drive that he had just completed, was too hungry and tired to be put off by their "service". He immediately started ordering and shot off a few items from memory and a few others from the card. Our waiter for the night, a portly middle aged man, took our orders and vanished in the general direction of the kitchen. And we started catching up on each other's lives as we awaited for our food to arrive.

With facebook, email and this ancient invention called the phone, we had very little actual catching up to do and since we were really hungry, started casting eager looks, waiting for the food to emerge. Instead, our waiter emerged bearing no food but only bad news.

"Sambhar vadai illa, mysore bonda-vum illa" (We're out of sambhar vadai and mysore bonda)

I may hold HSB in very little esteem. But I've got to admit that I do relish their sambhar vadai, the only redeeming aspect about the whole HSB experience. And so this revelation was particularly damning for me.

"Hmmm...sambhar idly oru plate, vegetable pakkoda oru plate kuduthudunga" shot back K, refusing to be dejected by the freshly delivered bad tidings.

"Sir, dosai mattum dhaan irukku, vera edhuvum illai" (There's dosai and nothing else.) He even closed his notebook with an air of finality. At HSB, bad service was always on the house.

"Oru onion rava and oru plain dosai kudunga" offered K, clearly unable to hide his disappointment. His KK Nagar pride had been punctured by the complete lack of service. By this time, I had lowered all my expectations and was ready to eat anything edible that was still available.

My onion rava came out under cooked in the center and the edges were burnt. How the chef managed to do that remains a mystery to me. K's earlier order, a mixed veggie parotta was somehow delivered and was pretty OK. And the other 2 dosais were nothing to get excited about.

Their red chutney (tomato/onion) was particularly good that evening and when we asked for an extra dollop, were told that, yes, it was not available ("segappu chutney aaidchu Sir").

All in all, that evening had all the elements of a "typical" HSB outing for me: bad service, a lot of attitude and ho-hum food. I'm now back to ignoring them. At least till K returns to the Bay Area.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

The affair

I received the call around 2pm during an afternoon lull at work. I was wrapping up something when her face flashed on the phone screen. I quickly looked around and stepped into one of the small huddle rooms and closed the door behind me. Lately the calls from her were few and far apart, betraying shifting priorities in her life. And even on those rare occasions when she actually called, the conversations were quick and limited. How things had changed from those earlier times of long, free wheeling chats. But this was no time to reminisce, I told myself, and answered the phone.

We did away with the usual greetings and small talk. This was usual practice as phone time has become a luxury now. Although she spoke in hushed tones, she sounded relaxed. May be even a little cheerful.

"Is everything OK at home?" I asked.

"Mm hmm. Listen, can we go out this evening?" she queried with hope. There was expectation in her voice and also anxiety whether I would not be able to.

"Hmm..OK." Although I had a few approaching deadlines, I decided that I would take time to spend with her.

"I mean, if you're busy...I didn't mean to..." she trailed off, hardly masking her disappointment.

"No. It's fine. Really." I assured her.

"Great. 7pm tonight?"

"Sure, I'll pick you up when I get off work. But..."

"Yeah?"

"What about him?" I asked hesitatingly.

"He is...I've made arrangements." came back the reply in a hushed tone.

"Your mother?"

"Mm-hmm..."

I kept staring at the phone even after she had hung up. The phone seemed the only means of nourishing our relationship.

Though I quickly got back to work, I was basically counting the hours down. At thirty minutes past six, when I thought it wouldn't seem too odd, I slipped out of the office. For a Wednesday evening, traffic was pretty light. Within minutes, I was heading west along the freeway speeding towards my destination.

It was just before seven as I pulled into the street. I was surprised to see her waiting for me at the intersection, away from the apartment building. The evening sunlight was filtering through the leaves and highlighting her features even as the gentle breeze played with her black locks. She was fidgeting with her purse and gave furtive looks. She didn't take effort to hide her tension.

I pulled up beside her and she hesitated a moment before she got in. I couldn't help look into her tired eyes. She smiled at me and urged me to start.

When was the last time we had gone out? My mind traced out an obscure outing many months back. When things were different. We were just the two of us then. And the families were happy too. Everything was hunky dory. Until the the other man's arrival.

Her family approved him and took to him in a big way right away. And she got swept away by the chaos all around. And my side of the family rejoiced too. They saw reason and tried to rationalize what was happening around me. Sure, he was good looking and held much promise. He was all that I was and promised much more. I couldn't blame her then and won't blame her now.

On the big day, a couple of months back, when everyone was jostling to wish and congratulate her, she pulled me aside and promised that everything would be fine and same as before. I smiled and nodded, patting her hands that she quickly withdrew and joined him. I had been skeptical and this was her first attempt at making it come true.

"Shall we stop for a quick cup of coffee?" I offered.

"No dear. Not tonight...must be home soon." Of course. As expected. I smiled ruefully. Things would be same as before. Her words echoed in my ears.

"The usual place then?"

"Yes."

I pulled into the Babies-R-Us store to pick up an assortment of baby oils, lotions, powders and the regulatory 216-count box of diapers.

How the birth of a son changes everything!

Sunday, June 12, 2011

English lessons from Taiwan straits

Many of the Asian countries kick off campaigns to try and get their native population to speak better English. A noble endeavor, if you ask me. Forget greater objectives like helping globalization or smoother business processes. On a more immediate and selfish note, I'll be saved the hassle of having to deal with emails like this. We can one day, perhaps, even eliminate ads like "Incheon: A world best air hub." Maybe I'm getting a little ahead of myself.

As you ponder the possibilities, I would like to bring for your reading pleasure two signs that caught my eye on my recent visit to Taiwan. Without further delay, exhibit A.

Kiss and ride. Yes, you read that right. Kiss. And ride. There were multiple directional sign boards pointing to such an area in every high speed rail station. Polite inquiries revealed that it was the passenger drop off/pick up area: the dropped-off kiss the droppers-off and ride the train. Sometimes I wonder if the case for interesting sign boards is stronger than that of correct sign boards.

Side note: In my second visit to the country since the winter of '05, the biggest change is the high speed rail running along the west coast of the country. A train journey between Hsinchu in the north to Tainan in the south that took 180 minutes then now only takes 70. And the trains look and feel like the good ol' Shinkansen of Japan right down to the box-lunch laden carts pushed around by uniformed girls.

Exhibit B: "I want a cheese pizza." "I want my steak medium well done"

Don't find anything wrong with these sentences? Me neither. Except that these were posted on top of, umm, the urinal. That is right. A small glass frame holds these neatly printed sentences along with their Chinese translations. Three sentences per urinal. My immediate reaction was "But cheese pizza is bad for your health!". I'm kidding. The first thought was, and mind you, I'm all for spreading the knowledge of English: Why on top of the urinal? Do you really believe that the moments spent there while performing a very delicate task that demands your undivided attention should involve a certain level of parallel processing to acquire language skills?

"I want a cheese pizza and my steak well done please."

"Right away Sir. Have you wet your pants?"

If the rest room is where food oriented language lessons are to be indeed dispensed, I would hate to think what is on the doors of the toilet stalls. Selected sections from the Martha Stewart Living Cookbook?

"What made you become a chef?"

"Constipation."

Eww.

I'm stopping right now.

You're welcome.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

The wait is over

June 25 1983 remains a hazy recollection. Of memories, recounted anecdotes and visuals. Some of them real, some imagined. Of being vaguely aware of a significant happening, seeing elders happy and excited. The momentousness of that summer day would only be realized over the years and recalled often; sometimes as a comforting memory and sometimes with fear that it may remain as only a memory.

1987 was sad but in a childish way. Cricket was still only a toy; not yet a religion or an opiate. Perhaps because, even at that age, the last ball six by that wily fox, Miandad, had tempered my expectations from this team. Or perhaps because a certain Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar hadn't yet arrived on the scene. Either ways, although it was held in India, that World Cup seemed distant and there was no real sense of loss when we were eliminated at the hands of England. I was able to quickly move on to the next distraction.

1992. Middle school is an unforgiving place and I was mature enough not to expect big things. It was a big stage and it seemed almost improper to expect that group to pull it off. Sachin was only beginning to give the nation a reason to believe. And the strength to hope for better cricketing fortunes. In the end, the sole comforting take away from that tournament was that we had beaten the eventual winners, the Pakistanis. And unsurprisingly, that was comforting; a dose of palliative strong enough to last four years.

It was on March 13th 1996 that it really hurt. I was about to graduate from high school. Adolescence, college, raging hormones and all that. Sachin had now come to mean cricket; an icon of hope, a comforting presence that could soothe almost every agony. Cricket ceased to be a team sport and became a one-man show. And the team's fortunes became synonymous with Sachin's. With his presence, the championship didn't seem all that big to aspire for. It was the first time that we had dared to dream big. Only for that dream to be rudely snatched away. Hence that loss stung. The team had failed it's champion. Yet again. The riots in Eden Gardens rubbed salt into open wounds. Even manhandling the Pakistanis in the quarter finals couldn't provide succor and the four year wait would be a painful one. With only the recollection of 1983 memories providing some relief.

1999. College life would end in a year. Bigger opportunities were being pursued in life with gusto. A measure of uncertainty was always present and even acceptable, both in life and Indian cricket. Cricket was like a long time girl friend: you had your fights but could count on it when it mattered. Thanks largely to a team that had a genius and ten mortals, watching cricket often meant relishing valiant knocks from Sachin in losing causes. But Sachin's twin exploits in the Arab peninsula an year earlier in 1998 once again misled a nation into believing that the game was perhaps an individual sport. Only to be reminded by the Aussies that it takes collective performances from an entire team to lift the cup. The batting trio were finally in place: Sachin, Rahul and Sourav. But apart from a few sparkling individual performances, beating the Lankans and the Pakis provided the only high points in an otherwise indifferent tournament from an Indian stand point.

2003. Many firsts. First time watching the game in the US. First time with friends and alcohol. And of course, the first time paying out of my pocket to watch cricket. Grad school was fun and so was following cricket. For the first time in memory, I followed the tournament with an intense yearning. The fan inside me wanted the Famous Four to bring home the silverware. The maniac inside had not mellowed enough to realize that it was sport. The team had developed a spine, spunk and a personality under Sourav. The license to kill was acquired over a 3-test series against the Aussies in early 2001. The strong core was still resilient and the young blood held much promise. The 2002 Natwest series trophy win provided a glimpse of a hitherto unimaginable scenario: Team India winning despite a Sachin failure. The bowling had a bite and the batting had an edge. In my opinion, 2003 was the closest we came to winning as a team since, perhaps, 1983. Only to be outdone, rather embarrassingly, at the last step by a very strong Aussie team. A week's mourning with friends, replaying memories from the many sparks of individual brilliance shown by Sachin throughout the 90s and playing some actual serious competitive cricket helped mitigate the bad hang over.

2007. The tournament that never happened. Posing as a responsible adult, gainfully employed and a traveling job. Adulthood messes up priorities. Life was dealing a tough hand. Tougher than what cricketing victories could help soothe. Cricket ceased to be what it was and as if in reflection of my personal state, India had a very forgettable campaign. If your only recollection of this tournament is losing to Bangladesh, then you know it was a bad World Cup. The giants of Indian cricket were fast approaching their sell-by date. The last opportunity to win the World Cup for arguably the greatest generation of players that turned out for the nation was lost.

The only interest for me this time around was to see if we could win this for Sachin, the sole remaining member of the Famous Five (Shame on the ones that omit VVS). Between T20, the IPL circus and utter commercialization of the game, my appetite for cricket was significantly reduced. Or was it simply age? No more maniacal following, no more superstitious rituals during a game. Yet ahead of the QF, all the accumulated indifference melted away. The years were rolled back. There was a child like anticipation, a strong desire, a growing despair and the paralyzing fear of a familiar result of being so close yet so far. A fear of a void that could never be filled.

The clinical quarter final victory over Australia wasn't quite sweet revenge for the 2003 humiliation, yet it felt good. The semi final win over Pakistan was, dare I say, along expected lines; if it is the World Cup and if it is Pakistan, we will win. But at 31/2, chasing a non-violent 274 made by the Lankans, the feeling of staring down an all too familiar barrel was inevitable. And yet I clung on. Reconciliation would be very difficult this time. Even impossible. Would we have to rest on simpler laurels like the most number of runs and centuries? Would we have to settle for memories of valiant knocks from the past? Would the tag of "the greatest player to have not won the World Cup" be something to live with for the rest of eternity? Even if we won in 2015, the sight of Sachin in the stands, applauding in plain clothes would be too much to behold. But this group of men in blue were not to be denied. A seemingly tough challenge was surmounted. Victory seemed almost preordained. A sense of destiny was inevitable. Justice was done. Goose bumps. Moistened eyes. A lump in the throat that was very difficult to swallow. A wait comes to an end. A 19-year wait for me. A change, the seeds of which were sown a decade back, bore fruit. A relief sweeps over. A nation's collective fear that the game's ultimate award would somehow escape the game's greatest artist is laid to rest. Funnily, what started out as one man's struggle since 1992 has ended as a real team effort.

The quiet beer that I relished standing in solitude on my balcony on the morning of April 2nd, basking in the afterglow was the sweetest I've ever had. Thank you Team India!

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Careless officer meets a long name

When unfurled to its full length, my name comes in at a princely 2 words, 16 letters and 7 syllables and can be an eyeful or a mouthful depending on what you were attempting to do with it. And that is only my last name. Throw in my first name with another 9 letters and 4 syllables and it begins to dawn that most Indians, with a few notable exceptions (Oh, Hi West Bengal!), have tongues as lithe as Nadia Comaneci and sport names that set them aflutter.
So yes, I do have a long name which makes for interesting conversations mainly at immigration desks and bank counters across the world. Do I like my name? Mostly yes. Have I run into issues because of its length? More times that I can count on my fingers. Often times, it gets truncated because forms and text boxes aren’t designed with my name in mind. Most likely by someone with at least a 10-character-long last name working from within the confines of an Infosys/CTS/TCS facility somewhere in xyz-halli in Bangalore. The irony.
My professor, when I was preparing to graduate, even recommended trimming my name so as to not put off a potential recruiter only because he was stumped by the train of alphabets at the start of what was an otherwise decent résumé. There are more than a few options for me to distill shorter names that are subsets of my full name. Yet when it comes to official documents, I’m forced to unfold my moniker fully. And face the consequences.
“That’s a long name”, observed the immigration officer at the counter after taking one look at my passport that barely managed to hold my name within its width.
I was entering the United States at San Francisco after what felt like an eternity being packed in an economy class seat with a grumpy lady to the left (fought 6 wars with me for elbow space and won on 4 occasions and drew the remaining two.) and a smug professional that just wouldn’t stop working on his spreadsheets right from take off to touchdown to the right for company. After touch down, I ensured that I made up for the 63E seat by walking fast on the travellator and beating most of the slow walkers to the “Foreign Passports” side of the immigration lines. I was the fourth person on the line after selecting the counter carefully.
Now, selecting the right immigration officer/counter at an airport is an art that I have, dare I say, perfected over the years. By the time I weave through the passengers and their pull bags, my brain, despite the state it is in, after much computations and analysis, has picked out the right line for me. The right choice could easily make up for the difference between a 32C seat vs. a 55F; or between speeding home 15 minutes after touchdown vs. convincing the officer that you are indeed Mallikarjuna and your father is Pottamsetty Surapaneni and Madanapalli is your village and not your mother. The key, it be told, is to not rush to any counter. No sir, you don’t. I start scanning them just as soon as they come into sight. As a rule of thumb, I avoid ladies. Go ahead, call me a sexist, an MCP or any other name. But I do avoid ladies. It is because they are slow. And they are slow because they are cautious and scrutinize more. They don’t want to be the ones that waved in Osama Bin Laden who then went on to blow up buildings. (Notice how I recovered from the ‘ladies are slow’ comment?) I wouldn’t choose lines with families with kids for the simple reason that a stack of passports take longer than a single one. Lines with men in turbans, long beards, skull caps and green colored passports are out, again for obvious reasons. I avoid the younger officers too. They are the ones that go back and forth a few times between the picture on your passport and your face. The photograph, shot at Manikandan studio ages ago when you were wrapping up college studies and felt that a passport wasn’t a bad idea, doesn’t bear the slightest resemblance to the puffy, groggy, scrawny you that is across the counter from him now. He is new on the job and won’t let any opportunity to shine pass him by. They always have a question or two and perhaps a smart(ass) comment too. Whereas the lady officers don’t want Osama bin Laden in their lines, the new hires eagerly expect him to show up at their counter. And neither approach ensures a quick clearance for you. I also steer clear of elderly officers, I mean old school ones that go through your hastily scribbled form like it was the final draft of their will that has been prepared and they were making sure that the favorite nephew was given his due before they signed on the dotted line. Old school is out. That leaves me with the middle aged, seasoned, heaven-may-care men. If, to revert to my favorite example once more, Osama B. L. showed up in front of them, they would have no concerns waving him in as long as he placed the right thumb first on the finger print scanner, then the left thumb and he looked into the camera after removing his glasses without having to be instructed thrice. They are the Usain Bolts of the immigration world. I love them. And you should too.
That day, Officer Chang (not real name) was the chosen one. Dressed in a fancy uniform with a firearm, a baton, a radio, a scowl and an attitude, he was letting in travelers with all the ease of a seasoned bouncer at a club on a Saturday night. He scanned my documents briefly, made the earlier comment as he keyed in my name into his system, stamped my visa and waved me in. I walked towards baggage claim with a smug look, casting a sideways glance at the grumpy lady and zealous professional who were at least a good 10 minutes behind now. Losers!!
A week after my entry, a couple of days before Christmas, as I lay passed out on the bed from a wicked cold and jet lag induced sleep laced with Nyquil, the phone rang at little past seven in the AM. I fiddled with the alarm clock for a full minute before I realized it was the phone that was ringing and picked it up groggily.
“Hello <(gingerly-pronounced-first-name)…(gingerly-pronounced-30%-of-last-name)?” said the voice at the other end. The “herro” gave away the identity of the caller: a lady of far eastern origin.
“Possibly yes” I said by way of an honest response. A dose of Nyquil, twice as strong as recommended, can cause funny reactions.
“That’s a rong name.” Of course. Although, I couldn’t tell if she meant long or wrong.
“I hate to shatter your ego miss but this ain’t the first time I’ve had someone say that to me.” Doffing the hat to Quentin T and Samuel L. J.
“We can’t process your SSN application” Her weaknesses, unbeknownst to me, may be many, but beating around the bush wasn’t one of them.
“Well, good morning to you too!”
“Sorry Sir. Your name has been entered wrongly in the immigration records and won’t match with the one on your application with us…” Sympathy, even if not overflowing in copious quantities, was definitely discernible in her voice.
“What time is the next available flight to home?” I rose up to the situation despite the mists of sleep not having fully cleared.
“You’d have to go to the Homeland Security Office in downtown San Jose and get this rectified. Oh and till that time, since we can’t process your application, we shall be closing it for now.” Obviously, I was not on Santa Claus’ good boys list.
“Merry Christmas, Officer Chang!”
For purposes of clarity, italicized responses are imaginary.
While the conversation didn’t exactly pan out that way, I lay on the bed, staring at the ceiling for a long time. “Knock it off guys.” I told the grumpy lady and smug professional as they laughed down at me from the ceiling calling me a loser. Pay back is a bitch!
Apparently my immigration official selection algorithm needed a tweak or two.
Later that day, a colleague at work filled me in that without a SSN I couldn’t apply for my driver’s license or get my car registered or get paid at work, for the matter of that. I’d essentially be volunteering at my company. Assuming someone gave me a ride to work, that is. Later that day, as my manager was busy shoving stuff on to my already overflowing plate, I pulled him aside to bring him up to speed on my situation. He was accommodative. As someone who routinely spelled Nithin as Ninth, he held any Indian longer than 4 letters in great esteem and graciously granted me time off to sort out the mess that I found myself in.
The Homeland Security office in downtown San Jose, where I drove to on a cold, wet, grey wintery afternoon, has all the trappings of a typical US Government office. Obama and Biden smile down on you as you subject yourself to a security check that can be booked for sexual assault in many countries. The people gathered there are always an interesting, colorful mix, of all races, colors and cultures, giving the waiting hall an almost United Nations like feel, conversing in exotic tongues about how the security officer that patted them down at the entrance would be stoned in public back where they came from. There are US citizens (many white men with an Asian lady clutching some papers in tow. I’m not judging anybody here. Who am I to stop anyone from living out their fetishes?), permanent residents, resident evils, legal aliens, illegal citizens and the occasional pet, all requiring something or the other to be taken care of with the immigration authorities.
Tiiinnnngggggg tooonnggggggggg “Trajeta Now numero aah quatorze serving A 14 ventinallia at window tres number three” comes the message from the speaker. This prompts the assembled to check their slip, strain to catch the message, look at the others and scratch their heads. But we don’t have to worry as only two of the twenty counters are manned that day to serve the swelling sea of humanity. After many rounds of Anglo-Spanish announcements, I somehow picked out that it is my turn.
“What’s your problem?” offered the ancient man behind the window, with as much friendliness of a very hungry Great Dane recently denied a meal. The Creator had clearly been in a bad mood when he had this guy built.
“My name has been spelled wrong in your records.”
“Really?”
“No officer, I was just kidding. It was a slow day at work and I wanted to drive down here in heavy rains to see how you were doing. Hey, wanna catch that latest Matt Damon flick later today? My treat!”
“Hmmm…let me see….”
After peering intently at the monitor for a long time, during which time his blinking was the only sign that betrayed he was alive, the ancient officer, about a week or two away from completely turning into a fossil, turned to look at me.
“Your name is wrong.” Officer Old Monk wasn’t one to mince words.
“I didn’t personally choose this name. But I’ll definitely let my parents know. They really are the culprits, you know?” I neatly sidestepped any blame coming my way.
“I cannot correct it.” Decreed the ancient vulture from its perch.
“I don’t blame you. I know it is a long one. Now if you’ll hand me the keyboard, I can do it for you.”
“You go to San Francisco, Washington Street office for correction. OK?” he said, gathering my passport and forms and pushing them out through the counter opening.
“Happy New Year Officer Chang!” I winced at the prospect of repeating the entire procedure in a different city. In keeping with the holiday spirit that was doing the rounds, let the good times roll!
I couldn’t get an appointment for the next two weeks and I had meeting #2 with my manager to apprise him of the situation. He was justifiably suspicious of my tales but still let me take time off from work.
Armed with a borrowed GPS, I arrived at the impressive building on Washington Street in downtown ‘Frisco. The nearest parking lot was a couple of blocks away and charged an arm and a leg to take in the car for an hour. A smiling Prez and his Veeps, awkward security checks, a token and Anglo-Spanish announcements: I knew my routine now. But the SFO office was different. Only because it smelled like a bouquet of homeless people. Perhaps because there were, inside the office, in various shades of grey, a dozen homeless people milling around, none of whom was guilty of a shower in the recent past, trying to take care of some business, the nature of which I wasn’t too sure. Scattered in the hall were also people that had a home and had showered.
When it was my turn, I stood facing an officer who was a dead ringer for a walrus. Yes. A bespectacled walrus in a grey shirt and a black tie, clearly exhausted from having dealt with a persistent homeless guy in a once-green hooded sweat shirt that was adamant that the homeland security office in general and Mr. Walrus, as its representative, in particular, were liable to provide him with enough money to get his pictures taken. That’s right. Just the kind of a pointless argument that would put the officer in a great mood to deal with my problem.
After I brought him up to speed on my situation, he asked for my passport and started punching away at the keyboard. His hard working, pudgy fingers managed to take him to some display on the monitor that caught his interest. He squinted his eyes, peered intently into the monitor, removed his glasses and went back and forth between passport and said monitor. After repeating the above steps, he put his glasses back on and looked at me.
“That’s a long name…” When it is time to christen my kids, they are so getting short names. I’m toying with the idea of embracing the Lexus method: LS 450 for the first one and GS 460 for the second. Try misspelling that! No. On second thoughts, don’t.
“We can correct your name but…” he let it hang there for effect while he was making up his mind about the next steps.
If this were the Tamil movie Sivaji (The boss), this would be the scene where Rajini loses it when Cochin Hanifa enquires about the total value of his project. For non-Tamil readers, I simply miss the problem-bribe-quick solution routine in India.
“…I must send you to the 11th floor where a few things need to be verified before the correction can be made.” It was almost an anti-climatic finish, what with all that build up he had provided.
Considering what I’d been through to get to this stage, reaching floor no. 11 and presenting my credentials was a piece of cake. Even if he had asked me to climb the stairs on my hands and provide the required clarifications in a classical dialect of Swahili.
The 11th floor office had a decent sized window that offered a view of a sliver of the bay, framed by dreary buildings on both sides. It was not the greatest of views that would make it to a SFO picture post card but something to keep the waiting folks amused, nonetheless. Since I didn’t have the time to appreciate the view, I approached the lone counter with a human presence as the other one was devoid of any life form. But this lady was carrying on a conversation using almost entirely nasal sounds.
“Ngyung yang ngyong gnya?”
“nanaong gnyomph ngaw….ooooooongh….ngyaou ngyung….”
Just listening to it left me breathless and gave rise to a growing sensation of wanting to clear my entire nasal tract. Thai. Or perhaps Vietnamese, I wasn’t sure. But definitely annoying, of which I’m more than sure. Not the language, but that she could carry on her conversation while someone was waiting for her attention. I must admit that I’m used to much worse humiliation at the counters of government offices in India. But hey, when in Rome…
From her body language, which included fiddling with the phone cable, toying with the stapler and doodling with her pen, it was clear that she wasn’t discussing a terror threat from an illegal immigrant or evaluating available methods to track down a notorious terror monger who had entered the US illegally, if that is what immigration officials do to earn their pho/kung pao. But if, on the other hand, she was indeed doing just that, then you might have to hand it to her that she was pretty composed under duress.
Imagine this conversation in Thai, or Vietnamese for that matter:
“Call the TV channels and flash their pictures. I want the border patrol chief here. Now. (twirling the telephone cord) Alert the Gov. and ask for troop supplements. (toying with the stapler) Call in the National Guard. I want all roads leading in and out of California secured. Gentlemen, we have a situation. (doodling a picture of a cat)”
After I started giving her the eye, more pleading than menacing, with much reluctance, she waved to a well nourished gentleman in an inside room, her colleague, who was busy talking to an equally well nourished cleaning lady and was in the middle of an animated conversation. He acknowledged the wave and in response, just continued with his conversation.
“That man help you.” She peeled herself away from the receiver just long enough to tell me this and quickly picked up her ngyu-ngyaying from where she had left off a moment earlier.
I waited for “that man” to get done with his conversation with the janitor and watched him shoe horn all of his portly self reluctantly into a woefully small chair that groaned and creaked to accommodate him.
“My name has been…” I sang the same song for a third time and offered him my passport. He had me confirm my name, date of birth and place of birth and seemed satisfied that I had no ulterior motives behind this request.
“That is a…” he started.
“Long name. Yes, it is.” I completed for him. I knew the routine well now.
He looked up at me and winked. Sweet. And remember, this is SFO. So, doubly sweet.
His pudgy fingers did a number on the keyboard and brought him to the menu appropriate. He looked at my name on the screen and the passport and his face took on the look of someone stuck for a fair bit on the sixth difference in a spot-the-six-differences puzzle. He cocked his head and tried looking at it from a different angle with no better results. He gave up trying to spot the differences and gestured to me to point out the typos. I realized that Officer Chang, as he speedily waved me in 3 weeks back at SFO, had allowed himself not one but two typos. With a surgeon’s precision, he made the corrections.
After nearly a month of driving around the bay area during work hours to various government offices and jumping through procedural hoops, it took all of 10 seconds for a portly man, who may or may not be homosexual, and who may or may not have made a pass at me to correct the mistakes and declare me a free man.
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Gasoline: $15
Parking fees: $12
Time wasted: 20 hours, less the 7 minutes saved at SFO
Enlightenment that US Govt. offices are merely air conditioned versions of Indian RTOs/Tahsildar offices: priceless.