“Once
a year, go someplace you’ve never been before”, Dalai Lama. For the last 2
years I seem to be following the advice of the wise man. Last year we visited Hong
Kong for the first time. Hong Kong felt like a combination of shades of China
and Singapore. In any case, the Communist Party would claim its not really a separate country.
So for me, the trip to the US marked a visit to a new country for the first time in a
long time.
Looking
at a country through the eyes of someone who has never been there before, you
notice things that residents treat as "commonplace". There were some things
that were “different” in the US. For instance, all doors open outwards i.e
towards the street while in the rest of the world they either open inwards or in
both directions. I was told this is for ease of evacuation in the case of an
emergency. The logic makes sense and I wonder why the rest of the world is different.
Over
the course of the 10 odd days I was in the US, I noticed some distinctly American characteristics
1.
The transportation
is different – The first evening in Napa I spent a good 5 minutes wondering
why cars were coming at me from the opposite direction till it struck me that
it is a country that drives on the right hand side. The following weekend when walking on The
High Line in New York with Craig and Marie, I kept getting bumped into. That's when I realized that Americans
drive on the right but walk on the left!!!!
View from The High Line |
The weekend I was in New
York, I did the touristy thing of walking along the 42nd street in
New York, taking in the sights as I crossed the endless number of avenues. At the
first traffic light, despite my “Indianness”, I waited for a green light patiently
but it did not come up. Instead I found people walking across. When this
happened for a second time, I started wondering whether following traffic rules
is restricted to the other English speaking country (the UK). Finally, I figured out that in the US, the
sign for the pedestrians to cross is a WHITE MAN not a green light or a
man in green like the rest of the world. I have no idea why and none of the
Americans I asked could explain.
Don't wait for the Green light - Go when you see the man |
In the UK, people stand
on the right on escalators and on the left in Singapore leaving the other side
open to people wanting to walk up (or down) the escalator. In the US, people
stood on either side. Infact, I concluded that people don't walk up or down an
escalator in the US J.
Before this trip, my only
experience of snow at airports was at Heathrow where a few centimetres of snow
(possibly even millimetres) caused the airport to close for days on end. So
when we landed at the Boston airport surrounded by several feet of snow, it was
a new experience for me. At the Boston airport, I had another new experience – we were denied access to the lounge despite flying business
class. Apparently, lounge access in the US is only for international business
class passengers – not something I have come across anywhere else in the world.
On the flight itself, the stewardess served pretzels after take-off – yes pretzels.
I put it down to the fact that it was a late night flight but I was told by my
American friends that it was the norm. A few days later, I managed access to
the lounge at the Newark Airport since I was on an international sector. It was
coming up to dinner time and having missed both breakfast and lunch, I was
hungry. The only food that I found was ………you guessed right – pretzels. I was
sure I was missing a counter so I asked and was assured that there were 3
varieties of pretzels and also banana’s !!!
The best thing about air
travel in the US is the ability to use your mobile phones even during take off
and landing. It is uniquely American and I wonder why all other countries are
still reluctant to change their regulations.
Offcourse, the traffic
jams were no different from the rest of the world. I got the first taste of it
driving from the San Francisco airport to Napa Valley. On a Friday evening on the
George Washington Bridge made famous by Chris Christie, I experienced traffic that
would compare with that of Jakarta or Mumbai J.
2.
Chatty
service– The first evening in Napa I went to a small cafe called “World
Food Cafe”. I was amazed at how chatty the waiters were. It was in sharp
contrast to the treatment I have been meted out in some European countries. At
first I thought it was because this was a “small” and seemingly run by a family
of Turks. As the days rolled on, I realized that the service at restaurants was
very good and all waiters were incredibly chatty.
During the wine tour of Napa, I ordered a starter and a main
course for lunch and all I could eat was the starter. The portion sizes in
restaurants are uniquely American and the only way to describe them is – they are
MASSIVE. Infact, burgers of the size that you would find in the rest of the world are referred to as "sliders". The other thing that stood out was the notion of “refill” of the drink
– you pay once and drink as much as you can or want (I suspect the need was much
less).
I stopped at a Starbucks in New York to have a Chai Latte. I
looked up at the menu board to figure out the price but saw two numbers. I initially
put it down to the jet lag but soon realized that there were indeed two numbers
– the price and the calorie count. Now that is something I have never seen at
any Starbucks and am told it is common practice in restaurants in the US. The 290
calories associated with a medium sized Chai Latte made me think 3 times before
ordering. The price was $3.99 so I took out 4 dollars only to be told that the cost
is actually $4.23. That is when I realized that in America all prices mentioned
are without taxes……that really does
take “Bata pricing” to a new, and uniquely American, level.
The chatty service I soon realized was not confined to the
realms of the restaurants but extended into all services including taxi
services. I then realized that it was linked to the culture of tipping that is so
ingrained in the service industry. I recall being told by Marie that New
Yorkers on an average tip 20% to cabbies – uniquely American.
3. TV – “If
you suffer from Alzheimers ask your Doctor to prescribe to you Namenda xr……”. I
have seen Over The Counter drugs being advertised on TV for diseases like a
cold or a flu. The US is the only country where I saw prescription drugs for
serious diseases being advertised on TV. I know there is an argument to be made
for putting the choice in the hands of the consumer. I guess in order to help the
consumer most of the ad is dedicated to disclaimers “…this could cause
drowsiness, diarrhea, increased blood pressure, cancer………..”. Uniquely American.
Hotels never offer a decent range of TV channels and the US was
no different on this count. So one evening, I found myself having to make do
with listening to a panel discussion on a news channel. What struck me was that
everyone was in violent agreement with each other. I switched channels and came
to another news channel having a panel discussion, funnily on the same topic.
Here again everyone was in violent agreement with each other but they were
saying exactly the opposite of what was being said on the other channel. I know
that in the UK your choice of newspaper is dictated by your political
inclination and I guess in the US it includes TV too!!!!
4. USA has
variety – The thing that struck me the most is just how much variety the US
has to offer. During a wine tour of
the Napa valley I learnt that half of the world’s soil types are present in the
Napa Valley. The valley is famous for wines but I would have never known that
there are more than 700 vineyards of
which 450 have brick and mortar structures. I had the pleasure of touring three such vineyards and they were dramatically different from each other.
From the Hunter Vineyard in Napa Valley |
The amount of variety available can be best gauged by a visit
to the supermarket. I gave up on the beer aisle but ascribed it to the fact
that I was a teetotaler. The next stop was the milk aisle where I gave up after
finding whole fat free, 2% reduced fat, 1% low fat and half and half even
before I had seen half the aisle. I thought that having worked in the laundry
category for 9 years, that is something I would find easy to navigate but the
number of variants of Tide made it impossible for me to figure out what I would
buy, if I needed to.
Even in terms of weather, I saw
warm sunny weather in San Francisco, freezing weather in Boston and a “balmy”,
as per Marie and cold as per me, weather in New York within the same week.
Offcourse, the fact that the US is a BIG country makes this variety possible. Infact, everything in the US is BIG – pick up trucks, meal portions, the bill boards at Times square, the wedding rings on the fingers of women….everything. So much so that when I went to Brooks Brothers to buy some shirts, I learnt that my size was ‘extra slim” which happens to be their smallest size. In most parts of the world I am either overweight or obese but in the US I am extra slim……..
Sunny Napa, Frozen Boston, Balmy New York in the same week |
Offcourse, the fact that the US is a BIG country makes this variety possible. Infact, everything in the US is BIG – pick up trucks, meal portions, the bill boards at Times square, the wedding rings on the fingers of women….everything. So much so that when I went to Brooks Brothers to buy some shirts, I learnt that my size was ‘extra slim” which happens to be their smallest size. In most parts of the world I am either overweight or obese but in the US I am extra slim……..
The ONLY time I have been declared "extra slim" |
It is not to say that there are no similarities between the US
and the rest of the world. Two things that distinctly stood out for me
1.
Desi Diaspora – I got to celebrate holi with my
friends from school – Amit, Kislaya and Sharad and some of their other
friends. It was quite amazing that even with snow all around they had managed
to celebrate holi, complete with malpua,
mutton and offcourse bhang. It was
great meeting Amit and Kislaya after 23 years (I had met Sharad in December
after 23 years!!!!) and also make some new friends also from Patna. Amazing
that at Sharad’s place in Glen Rock, I got to meet so many people from Patna
who went onto IIT Kanpur.
Holi with friends at Glen Rock |
2. Contractors
(and politicians) are the same around the world – wholly unreliable idiots – I
know that contractors in India are impossible to deal with. They promise the
earth and always over run on both time and cost and never deliver what was
agreed upon. I know that the same situation holds in the UK having heard horror
stories from Robert and Simon. I was surprised to hear from Amit and Priyamvada
that the same is true in the US as well. I guess some characters don't change around
the world.
“A mind that is stretched by a new experience can never go
back to its old dimensions”, Oliver Wendell Holmes. Certainly, for me the visit
to the US has helped me see things in parts of the world I am familiar with
like India, Singapore and the UK in a new light. It was my first visit to the
US but I am certain it will be the first of many, god willing.
nice post Vijay, like the observation style of writing...
ReplyDeleteWell written post Vijay
ReplyDelete