June 1st, 2009 S Kalyana Ramanathan
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For someone whose idea of life outside India for the first thirty six and half years of his existence restricted to occasional corporate junkets with glimpses of airports and star hotels, the last six months in London as a resident has been a completely new experience. This is my short preface to five new and unique experiences I have had and I wish to share now. I assure dear reader, that none of this is profound and you should take this more than a mere scribble in my diary at your own peril.
#1 Tube Face
The indispensable London Underground seems to have one undesirable impact on its users. I am yet to meet a smiling face in the tube. People simply don’t smile when they get 24 meters (average depth of the tube) below the ground. My rotten arrogance surfaces once in a while and I try to break this by smiling at a stranger with a hope of setting a new record in the tube. The best response I have received so far is a nod that lasts no more than a nano-second.
#2 Ear-shattering blow
An average Londoner is a perfect gentleman/lady. There cannot be two opinions about this. Why then do they blow their noses so loudly in public places is something I am yet to understand. Take this literally. When a Londoner blows his nose, he ensures that people five meters on either side hear it. The saving grace is that he/she always, always uses a tissue.
#3 Week-end frenzy
Life during weekends, starting from Friday evening goes on the fifth gear. There is a manic planning that precedes this. What am I going to do this weekend is an essential question that every self-respecting Londoner seems to be asking himself. While the average answer to this is not very creative, it is just another harmless side of the simple-minded Englishman. Get ready to see miniature barbecue stoves on the balconies of garden-less apartments like the ones I live in!
#4 Beer and ale guzzlers
This my favourite. A pint of beer bang in the middle of the day? This is a futile question only a narrow-minded (and hypocritical) Indian like me can ask. I remember being petrified of being caught by my boss every time I had a beer with lunch when I was in Delhi. God knows how many cartons of “Centre Fresh” must have covered my darker side. Here and now is my chance to lead a guiltless life. You will be the odd one if you order your lunch without the beer. Cider for the ladies.
#5 Queue crazy
Actually this my real favourite. It almost seems like my English-speaking friends love to stand in the queue. Something tells me its part of their religion. Why else would there be so many queues all over London. From smallest roadside newstand to the plushest of plush malls have innumerable queues. The queues only seem to grow as the the shops add more tills. Just draw a yellow line with the words “stand behind this line” and you will have a dozen folks ready to fall in line. Memorize this one. It will save your life some day. I once walked up to a newstand which seemed deserted to buy a pack of cigarette. The vendor gave me a cold stare and then I heard a booming hello (not greeting definitely) behind me. A solitary customer apparently was waiting in the “queue” for the vendor to say “next please.” I almost gave up smoking that day.
(Photo by S Kalyana Ramanathan)
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June 12th, 2009 at 2:21 pm
Media shut up … don’t over doo it …I
I am living in Australia for more than a year now their are lot of asian’s here ( lot of chinese …) and I can see they are very successful .
We Indians have habit of making issue of every thing that why we get kicked if from every where … Fiji,Malasia,Sri Lanka …
I WOULD LIKE TO TELL INDIAN MEDIA …
SHUT UP .. dont give Indian a bad repo
June 2nd, 2009 at 3:05 pm
Regarding your observation “#5 Queue crazy:”.
I guess the descipline is their plus point. They are so organised. And we indians have a lot to achieve in the area of discipline; irrespective of which part of the world we live.I am not being disrespectful for our culture or people but just admitting an area where we need to improve if we have to gain respect internationally.I have seen that we can turn any situation in to almost a disaster if there was no one to control them. And crowd need not be too big; only a few people are enough. There is that unknown desperation to be the first on the counter or to be first in or out of the flight . And its not that only uneducated people do that; I have seen even wery well educated/well dressed people do this. Even if people some how get in the queue; you can see that desperation/uneasyness in their body language about when their turn will come? And even in the queue intentionally/unintentionally they will be pushing the person next in the line! As if suddenly their mind has lost control over their hand or body parts !! A few months back when one of the American Aircraft had to land on water and it was going to go down in water in a few minutes; I saw in the vidoes that even in that cold weather and potentially life threatening situation; people were patiently waiting for their turn to be pulled in the life boat. I can’t imagine the situlation if it was an aircraft with all Indians on it. May be we would have made sure that it was drown in water even before help arrived!