My first adult stopover at Chennai. It is not bad. But then this is not Chennai. I am at the lobby of Trident Hilton. Each moment reminds me of her.
But it feels good to see your own name on a placard in the hand of a smiling suited chauffeur. Trident is good. And next day when you are dropped to the US Consulate in air conditioned comfort you dont even let the Chennai heat get to you.
However the moment of truth arrives when you step out at the US consulate in Chennai, the second busiest in the world. You are a commoner from whom the US of A would like to know why you want to meet uncle Sam.
For those who have had the ignominy of attending a walk-in, a visit to the US Consulate will augur similar emotions. As one moves forward, each progressive step, one starts feeling a little more edgy. Depends on how badly you want to travel. You peep out to overhear what the other guys are being asked. Your heart skips a beat each time you hear "Sorry! I cannot give you a Visa."
I was trying not to be nervous. I was not. But I confess my muscles were not very loose either. I am human after all. The whole buildup; your immigration team's briefing session, the several suggestions and counter suggestions, the experience at the consulate leading to your interview cannot help but make your muscles tight.
I was never one of those who badly wanted to travel to USA. It would be nice to visit but my life would'nt be incomplete if I never visit USA.
For me it has always been Europe, Latin America and ofcourse Scandinavia - my dream destination. And so it seemed the same with my Consular interviewer.
He had the man next door look but he had already rejected two applicants out of the 5 before me. He had got deep into the last 4 asking questions like "What's the difference between http and https" and "Whats the job of a network switch?".
I cannot lead him to get too technical I determined. After all I was struggling to remmember the full form of ERP while in the queue.
My turn came. I stood legs crossed (they cant see your legs). "Hi!", we greeted each other. "How are you doing?" he asked. Is this is a trap? "Fine" I said and kept it short. Get on with it. And he did and startled me with his harmless query, "So you are an SAP expert?".
For those split seconds when everything goes blank something was trying to make me blurt out "Yes". But I won and said "No, I develop training materials around SAP".
"So you work for Deloitte," he seems to have some respect for my firm. I replied, "Yes", avoiding the temptation to speak more.
Next, another shocker, "So what is SAP?". Did'nt he know that already. Why does he need me to explain it to him. "It's an ERP solution", I replied. "See, I am not a techie like you, so please dont use jargons and your techie terms. What is ERP?".
Quiverishly I said "Enterprise Resource Planning???". The question was more in mind than in my answer. "So what does it do?". "It helps increase the efficiency of a firm by streamlining... blah, blah, blah".
Sorry folks I dont remmember a word. I crossed the fingers of my legs. "Hmm.." he said and then suddenly "You have been to Denmark?". "Yes!" my muscles finally loosened. "Is it beautiful?", he asked. "It is very beautiful, the entire Scandinavia is beautiful". "You bet it is. But you will enjoy the US. Goodluck."
P.S. - I did check later that ERP is indeed Enterprise Resource Planning