A few weeks ago, I wrote how, when I was ten
years old, my two older cousins produced a jar of Vanishing Cream, challenging me to apply it to my face and make myself invisible. Well, the other day I had a slightly different
experience. I felt like the man who wasn’t there. Oh, I was there alright, but
the people and the organization I was dealing with just would not credit my
actual presence or deal with me directly.
It all started when I received a letter from my bank
informing me that after the 30th of November I would be charged
$1.25 for each bank statement I received by mail. The letter further informed
me that I could avoid this $1.25 charge by opting to receive further bank
correspondence about my account in paperless eStatements.
I thought that this was a good idea. Not only
would I save $1.25 each time a received an eStatement, I would now be
getting what the bank called “paperless bills”. I would help reduce the number
of trees being cut down for paper. Then I remembered that I would print out the
eStatements on my printer because I would want to file them with all my other
paid and unpaid invoices. The bank would save on paper but I would not.
However, I still decided to go for paperless bills.
The bank's letter assured me that I could register online to
receive my eStatements. No trouble whatsoever. All I had to do was go to the
bank’s website and follow the eStatement links.
Unfortunately, that was not all I had to do at all.
I opened the bank’s website and clicked on the
eStatements link. I was asked to insert my PAN. I had no idea what my PAN was.
I went to the bank’s FAQ site and was told my PAN was a series of numerals on the top right
hand side of my bank statement, just under my Account Number. Actually,
the bank called them numbers, which is not mathematically correct. You would think a bank would know about things like that.
the bank called them numbers, which is not mathematically correct. You would think a bank would know about things like that.
I typed in my PAN and then was prompted to enter my
SECURE CODE. I had no idea what my secure code was so I typed in the PIN for my
account.
“SECURE CODE Invalid. Please enter a valid SECURE
CODE.”
So, I typed in a few more numbers and passwords that I
use for various internet activities. They all were invalid. I then received a
message. “You have used all of your chances to enter a SECURE CODE. Please
follow the link to change your SECURE CODE online.”
Below this information was a link to Change Secure Code Online. I clicked on
it and a message said, “Please telephone this number.”
A telephone number? What happened to getting my
eStatement and changing my SECURE CODE online? I telephoned the number. It was a 13 hundred number,
which are the very expensive calls. The automated voice of a young lady welcomed
me and gave me various banking options which I could access by pressing numbers
1 through to 5. I pressed 1. The same automated lady gave me a few more
options. I pressed 1 again. A different, more authoritative voice told me that
I was in the telephone queue to speak to a bank officer about eStatements. The authoritative
voice then informed me that my estimated waiting time in the queue was 4 to 8
minutes. I hung up.
I went back and had another try at registering for
eStatements online. At length, I still finished up having to ring the 13
hundred telephone number. So, I did. After going through the various options again
and pressing 1 again I was pleasantly surprised that the authoritative automated voice was now
telling me I only had an estimated waiting time of 2 to 4 minutes.
Almost immediately I was talking with a very pleasant
bank officer named John, who seemed very pleased to be talking to me. Except
before we could get down to business John wanted to know my IDENTIFIER. I had no
clue. I asked if it was Ryan, my mother’s maiden name? it wasn’t. It wasn’t my
father’s middle name, my first pet’s name, the capital city of Florida or the make of my first motor car.
John was determined to help. He asked me my home address,
my date of birth, my mobile phone number, my home phone number and if I preferred
red jellybeans to black jellybeans. I made that last one up, but I am sure it would
have been next on the list, except that John said could I hold the line while
he made some further enquiries.
Five minutes later John came back and said that I had
given sufficient information to pass the security checks. He then told me my
IDENTIFIER. It was part of a pass word I used to use about six years ago. John
told me that I would need to tell the teller at my bank my IDENTIFIER before
they could give me my SECURE CODE.
What? The teller? At the bank? “Hang on, John,” I said, “I thought that we
could do this online. Just tell me my SECURE CODE and I will be home and hosed."
To John I was non-existent. He had to deal with technology.
John explained that he would not tell me my SECURE CODE. I had to get my SECURE CODE from a
bank teller, after I had handed over my credit card and told them my
IDENTIFIER. John said this was for reasons of security and privacy and was in
my best interests. He was such a nice fellow, even if he did not recognize me
as someone he could do business with on a personal level.
I drove to the local branch of my bank. Upon entering,
I noticed that there were only two tellers and six people waiting. I also
noticed that the two people already doing business with the two tellers had calico
bags. This meant they were from local businesses and were delivering the day’s
takings. This could take some time. It did.
While I was waiting, I read all the signs in the bank,
including one, on the wall right above the two tellers which said “For the safety of our employees this bank
does not hold large amounts of cash. If you wish to withdraw a large amount of
cash please give the bank 24 hours’ notice” Yes sir, banking has certainly
changed.
Eventually, I reached a teller. I explained that I needed
a SECURE CODE to register for eStatements. I handed over my credit card and I
told her my IDENTIFIER.
“That’s quite correct, Noel,” said Ann. She had read the name on my credit card and I had read her name tag.
Then she said, “Do you have your mobile phone with
you, Noel?”
“No. Do I need it? I was just told to bring my credit
card.”
She smiled and said, “We send your SECURE CODE to your
mobile phone.”
“But, I am right here. Can’t you just tell me my
SECURE CODE?”
Ann smiled again and said, “For purposes of security
and privacy we have just sent your SECURE CODE to your mobile phone.” For the second time in an hour my two friendly bank
officers had refused to divulge my SECURE CODE to me personally. Even when I
was standing right there in front of Ann, the very friendly bank teller, she
refused to divulge what was going to appear as a text message on my mobile phone.
It was Déjà vu. I wasn’t there, again.
When I arrived home my SECURE CODE was on my mobile
screen. Within two minutes I was a registered eStatements customer.
The experience of being in direct contact with people
who refused to acknowledge my presence reminded me of the poem, Antogonish, by
William Hughes Mearns. He wrote the poem over 100 years ago after reading about
events in a haunted house in Antogonish, Nova Scotia.
Yesterday
upon the stair
I
met a man who wasn’t there
He
wasn’t there again today
I
wish, I wish he’d go away.
That
Man Who Wasn’t There.
I know just how he feels, that man upon the stair who
wasn’t there. But at least I know my SECURE CODE. My telephone told me!