I walked in to see one person at the counter and everyone else sitting in the waiting area. Assuming they had already paid and were waiting to be called for their tests, I went to the counter. “Take a token please,” the data entry official said. Her hijab was new too. “A token? There is a token machine now?” She waved her hand towards it. Lab tests, Collect reports, said the options. I took a number, went and sat in the waiting area with the others and gave my son a lecture on the possible impact of insentient control mechanisms on a tribal society.
As usual, he ignored me and read the book he had brought with him instead. But the elderly woman sitting across from us and eavesdropping appreciated it. “I don’t know why they did this,” she said. “I’ve been sitting here forever and it still isn’t my turn.” I nodded but didn’t smile or reply. Little old Pakistani ladies are dangerous things. The slightest encouragement or confidence, and they’ll take a scalpel to your personal life.
A man in shalwar kameez entered and distracted us. He looked visibly ill and more than a little irritated. “What token machine?” he barked when the woman at the counter told him off for interrupting her leisurely exchange with a colleague. “Where is this token machine?” Clearly suspicious, he calmed down only when a well-dressed mother accompanying a young woman told him gently that it was behind him. He stood in front of it for a minute or two, so that we would understand he was mulling the philosophical implications of each option, before selecting one and seating himself, in proprietary fashion, right next to it. The token machine hadn’t existed before he discovered it, his body language said.
Then ensued a power struggle between the mother and daughter and the irritable man as they vied for the right to name and claim. Summoned to the counter, as their number was up, the ladies divided their attention between the data entry and the door. One would answer a question while the other watched for fresh blood. As soon as someone walked in, “take a token!” would fly from soft, coloured lips and pallid compressed ones simultaneously. Confused, each new entrant would stand paralysed in the foyer till the data entry official nodded to indicate her assent. It had to come from authority, you see.
As the minutes ticked by, the waiting area grew crowded. My son, without raising his head, elbowed me to move over and make room for a long-haired budget burger with grease marks on his arms and the smell of motor oil. “Thank you,” said the mechanic. “Ummhmm.” The head remained in the book, the kid unaware that his politeness had pushed me into the female half of the waiting area. Not only did the move spoil my perfect record of resisting voluntary segregation in public spaces, it also brought me within striking distance of the little old lady, who pounced immediately by asking me where the boy’s father was.
A driver and a begum walked in one after another and stirred things up. The driver made it to the token machine first, but its guardian pointed out there was a “ladies” behind him. The driver obediently moved aside. The begum examined the options on the touch screen before pushing the slot at the bottom where the token would have emerged. A flush crept up her white neck as nothing happened. It deepened when the driver reached past her and indicated she should tap the screen instead. Everyone gave him dirty looks. He had made the moneyed look ignorant. It was asking for anarchy. He took his own token and retreated into a corner to hide behind a banner announcing computerised results.
“This is not fair, that man at the counter got here after me!” the little old lady said when her attempts to elicit my life story proved fruitless. “I’ve been here forever! I’m going to complain!” She got up, muttering suitable gratitude to the lord for allowing poor old her to retain some semblance of motor function and waddled over to the counter. Talk to the display, the data entry official said with a raised finger. If your number isn’t up there, you shouldn’t be up here.
She retreated to stand before the token machine, hurt. “But I’ve been here forever,” she said to its guardian. “Let me see,” he took her token. “Oh I know what the problem is, you are here to collect reports and you took a token for a test instead. That’s why it’s taking so long.”
“What do I do now?”
But nobody offered her their own token. She settled, after a while, into the vacant spot by the guardian and devoted herself to asking why rage threatened to consume him.
“I don’t like this new system,” the driver behind the banner called to the mechanic. “Everything is out of place. The old system was better.”
Published in The Express Tribune, April 1st, 2014.
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COMMENTS (11)
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Much ado about nothing!
Rex Minor
Bravo! The finest in recent times!
@Unknown: Are you serious? Seriously? Different token machine for different options. That would require an entire room for machines. If you follow my drift. Multiple options on a token machines do not have a design flaw. The machines should be 'User Friendly"..now that is the key word. And the "Senior Citizen" lady would not have sued. it would have been a frivolous lawsuit. Thrown out by the presiding judge. However, she would have sued you,..for calling her an old lady. Now ' Old Lady '...that would be blatant discrimination.
loved it! wry humor at its best
This happen in USA as well so not a new problem. Simple solution is to have different token machines for different options. When you put so many options in one, it becomes difficult for a new comer and specially old people. Clearly, having multiple options on a same token machine, have a fundamental design flaw. Machines should solve the problems instead of creating the new one. I agree with the driver and mechanic as the new system failed to help and old lady was the example. Only important thing is, if this would have happened in USA, the old lady would have sued the company for destroying her valuable time.
In Pakistan, people make fun of these people who failed to understand the complex system and in USA they sue for installing such system.
One simple solution to that company with the current machine, is to hire a person who can ask the customer of his/her requirement and press button, it will solve above such scenarios.
All over the world people are just a computer number and authority does not care about them from the top down. For example, the only thing Governments members are really interested in is their weekly pay cheque, retirement payout, and how they can gouge money out of the numbers. Better get used to it.
Very well written. Loved it!
"...and gave my son a lecture on the possible impact of insentient control mechanisms on a tribal society" seriously Ms. Minhas? that too in the waiting area of a blood test center?
I don't see why this has anything to do with the society being tribal. All new things bring fear, from electricity to telephones. Great writing nonetheless.
I loved your article because of two reason. For one it was funny and second, it touched upon something our societies are witnessing today, a transition. In a globalized world, it would be hard for us to sit back and not change with the coming challenges, new system will come not matter what. Then its all survival of the fittest.
Read something brilliant after a really long time........you had me riveted. I suppose it was the fact that one could so relate to this simple story, told so effectively.