Dedicated to my youngest reader, who lives around the corner - Anjali Mallena. Thank you, Anjali.
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Preface: We are all ageing by the day in modern world, so to help those who have become victims of partial or complete amnesia or other related maladies in the intervening two months, here is how the earlier serving on Online Shopping ended: "To be fair, we (meaning, the author's family) do order a few things online nowadays and not many have gone wrong. (To be continued in Part Two)".......Now, with that bit of restoration having been done, we can move along.
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Preface: We are all ageing by the day in modern world, so to help those who have become victims of partial or complete amnesia or other related maladies in the intervening two months, here is how the earlier serving on Online Shopping ended: "To be fair, we (meaning, the author's family) do order a few things online nowadays and not many have gone wrong. (To be continued in Part Two)".......Now, with that bit of restoration having been done, we can move along.
A few months ago, about that time in the morning when this scribe usually
enjoys his best sleep, he was shaken up with a fair degree of violence
(granted, that was unusual) by his dear wife. When he woke up all
bleary-eyed and flustered, he saw the lady standing by the bed-side, arms
akimbo and eyes flashing - a typical posture assumed to signal that all was not
well, especially for the individual trying to stir up. Empirical
knowledge oozing from accumulated wisdom and very swift analysis of the stored
data relating thereto made the author recognize pronto, the unfriendly
environment for what it was, even though he was still coming abreast of the
fuller details of early morning existence. Without a cheery`howdy' or
other preliminary niceties, she opened the proceedings in that deliberately
'controlled' (those who are sympathetic to the author may choose to substitute
`menacing', without straying too far from the truth) tone she employs to barely
conceal irritation and/or disappointment (like Aunt Agatha did with Bertie
Wooster).
"What flight did you book my mother on"? she queried. Even as
the victim was mildly bewildered as to why on earth her mother - always calm,
kind, truly grounded and soft-spoken - had to take flight, the portends slowly
sunk into his brain, which was still crackling out of slumber. His
distressed demeanour, akin to that of the veritable deer-in-the-headlight, must
have broadcast his confusion with FM clarity -- that the intake rate and
comprehension levels were way below par. For she proceeded to clarify by crisply
adding: "Flight from Mangalore"? Now, you must admit that your
author is smart as needles otherwise and vividly captures the picture once
adequate pointers are provided by the counterpart; but here he was, labouring
below peak form under foggy conditions as he was shifting posture from
horizantality to perpendicularity for the first time on the day. Despite
all those handicaps, it all came to him in a flash and he remembered that his
mother-in-law and brother-in-law were to fly that morning to Bangalore on
tickets booked by himself online earlier. Masterfully suppressing the
trepidation that was rising from his stomach-pit, he managed to mumble
"Why, what happened"? The response was clear, cold and like the
knife gliding through soft butter - "They are at the airport and have been
told that their tickets are booked for the same date two months
later". All you need to know is they had to buy fresh tickets at an
exorbitant price to fly that day and the author's perilously positioned stock
nosedived even further on that side of the family.
That fiasco came about
only because this author did not follow the rigour that online booking of
tickets demands, without giving one too much leeway to correct mistakes.
Especially if one had looked high and low for tickets for flexible dates and
did not conclude the booking process for some reason. When you return
later to triumphantly seal the best deal of the day, you should not assume that
the dates of travel you had in mind are captured correctly on Kayak or Jet
Airways, whatever. Remember, two decades back all this work was thrust on
the travel agent, who earned his commission doing this for a job. Now we
tend to go over the top, over-analyzing available options online, simply
because the entire airline schedule is at our finger tips, literally. By
the time you experiment with all the permutations and combinations of airline,
departure time, date, pricing, auspicious day for travel etc, fatigue sets in
and you tend to overlook something critical. For some reason, while
booking this ticket, the wrong date was picked for one leg and the rest was
misery for one individual, the booker! It was another story that I had to write
100 times, reminiscent of the imposition in school days - doled out as
punishment to atone for some misdeed - that "my mother-in-law was
obviously welcome at our home any time"!!
I had no defence the
second time this happened, when at the airport we found that our tickets were
again for the wrong date and we had to take an unplanned road trip to Madras. I
can assure you that had not even the remotest resemblance to the one Hrithik
Roshan and Katrina Kaif enjoy in `Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara'. Another
disaster that strikes when some smart alec tries to play the system endlessly
to get the best possible deal. A friend lost the last remaining seats for USA
on a good flight because he was avaricious enough to wait overnight. He
ended up paying some 60% extra for the same seats when he woke up next morning.
If that was a date-related goof-up, venue-related hiccup is not far behind.
I booked tickets for a movie recently and we presented ourselves at the
box-office at the appointed hour to collect the same. We were
flabbergasted to be told that the movie was not showing in that multiplex at
all. Bristling at this nonsense that they would issue tickets for a
no-show, I was preparing for an onslaught when something deep inside me
demurred. Before my belligerence got the better of me, I checked the ticket and
lo and behold, it was for a multiplex with a similar sounding name belonging to
the same group, about 15 kms away. We grinned in embarrassment and bought
fresh tickets for another movie and enjoyed it too. The redeeming feature
was that the loss this time was only Rs.200 for two tickets since it was a
morning show!! It was my imbecility alright, lulled into a comfort zone
by the oh-so-familiar online platform; I swear it would not have happened, had
I gone to the theatre and booked my tickets like in the good old days.
But, let this scribe declare in unequivocal terms that the immense convenience
of the new age process beats the old one hands down, no doubt (especially in
booking train/event/bus/airline tickets), so long as one is not averse to face
up to the occasional discomfiture resulting from errors of commission and omission.
One thing I intensely dislike about some e-commerce portals is the way refunds
are handled, assuming clients are dummies. Even if you had paid by a
credit card earlier, they try to take the mickey out of you by crediting the
refund to your account with `them' instead of crediting the card account.
That way they believe they are doing smart business because you have to buy
something from them again to use the refunded amount and they are not out of
funds at all - dual benefits for them. Somewhat like the practice of toll
booths on highways trying to pay you the balance (change) in `chocolates', when
one is not even sure whether you are getting the right value back. Once,
when I got 4 chocolates as change, I tried to give them to the next toll both
(belonging to the same company) for the same value. I had to argue for 5
minutes before they got accepted, not because the attendant was convinced by my
argument but because of the persistent honking of the drivers behind!!
Now, let me go back to the first mishap mentioned in this blog, the
Mangalore-Bangalore ticket for my mother-in-law. When all the hubbub had
subsided and I imagined I was clearly out of the danger-zone, I ventured to
politely ask my dear wife as to why none of them (she herself, her brother and
mother), who had checked the ticket after booking, picked up the error and got
it corrected. Valid question, you would think? All I got was a
benign stare like the one she usually reserves for one of her less-gifted and
errant children in school and she asked blithely `Now, trying to shift the blame,
are we'?? I knew better than to answer, because all the people involved
were from the other side of the family!
1 comment:
Laughed my way thru your blog. Nearly got scalped in the very same manner. Did it for my sister and her friends travelling to Darjeeling. I thought i had picked up saver fares for them and read out the amount to my sister who was delighted. When the 4 tickets were issued I found out much to my chagrin that the word lite appeared near the seat numbers. On checking I found i had booked them all for a 10 day holiday without checked in baggage!
Online booking ....Heaven help us all!!!
Sheela Sarath
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