Monday, July 29, 2013

WEB CHECK-IN

WEB CHECK-IN

I have a running gripe with my secretary’s web check-in habits. My requirements are simple. No middle seat. I want aisle on long flights and window on short ones. Front row (better leg room) except when travelling by ATR, when back row is preferred (rear entry). She seldom gets me a middle seat, but rarely gets anything else right.  Yesterday, on my flight to Coimbtore, when I got 1A, I was cautiously elated suspecting that it might be an ATR. The check-in girl confirmed my apprehension but gamely shifted me to 15D. All was well.

            When I got the boarding pass for the return journey, the seat no was 4D and the counter confirmed that it was not an ATR. But my satisfaction was short-lived. When I boarded the flight, I saw that my colleagues Shah and Prasad were occupying seat nos 1B and 1C. What the heck. If their secretaries could get them the front row, why not mine? My deflated ego got a sudden boost when boarding was completed and the seat next to mine was not filled up. I luxuriously crossed my legs and opened my ipad. Before I could immerse myself in Stephen King’s bizarre world, I heard a loud racket going on at the seat across the aisle. A young lady was frantically trying to control her two sons aged roughly 1 and 2 yrs. Both started bawling as soon as we took off. I wanted to help but was handicapped by the language barrier; the tykes spoke only the local lingo. Just then, a Good Samaritan lady (if that is the right metaphor), came to the rescue of the harried mother and started expertly cooing to the screeching monsters. I silently thanked her, shoved in my earplugs and opened my ipad again. However, I soon realised that her only contribution was adding her own mite to the prevailing cacophony. Luckily the flight was before time and the landing and disembarking was pretty efficient. To my utter delight and against all odds, perhaps thanks to the law of averages, my suitcase was the first to roll off the belt and I triumphantly marched off waiving to the waiting duo of Shah and Prasad. Alas! I had to cool my heels outside for about 10 minutes as the driver had not taken into account the early arrival of the plane. Moral of the story, everything evens out in life. 

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