An um..interesting experience that happened to silklister Nishant Shah
yesterday. More power to him. (I am copying it in full below for those of
you who won't go on facebook, but it is a publicly-visible post there)

I wanted to use this as an opportunity to ask the list about two things:

1) Any similar experiences you may have had or witnessed, and your thoughts
on those;
2) How the nature of being an "ally" (however you define that term) has
changed in 2018.

Anyone?

Udhay

https://www.facebook.com/nishant.shah/posts/10155825812042337

I have never hit anyone as an adult. I decide that the right time to do it
is when we are 33,000 feet in the air on a 12 hour long flight.

We smiled at each other in economy resignation sociality, as I got out of
my aisle seat and she slid into the cramped space of the middle seat.

As we settle down, trying to defy physics and compress ourselves in the
misleadingly called 34 inches of ‘comfort’, she makes a joke: “this is
going to be Cosy!”

I smile politely and remind her we are going back to The Netherlands;
gezellig is what we live by. More polite smiles. When you have 12 hours to
spend next to each other, shoulders rubbing, elbows navigating the 1.5 inch
of armrest, you learn to be polite and laugh at bad jokes.

It isn’t long before personal spaces have been established, and we are all
immersed in the lulling immersion of in-flight entertainment, the sonic
landscape of noise cancellation headphones distracting us from the cramps
and tightnesses that are offered as a free service on long haul flights.

3 hours into the flight, I come back from a saunter to the galley, grabbing
water, when she looks up at me. “I know this is going to sound very silly
but would you mind changing seats with me? “

I pause for a bit to see if this is some kind of a bad joke - the famous
Dutch sense of humor that I don’t always get. It isn’t. She is in earnest.
I look at her and very measuredly tell her that won’t be possible. There
was still 8 hours of flight time left and there was no way I was going to
subject myself to the agony of a middle seat wedge-in.

She gives a half way smile. “Yes. I know. It’s just... this seat is so
tight. “

“You can ask the cabin crew if they have other seats”. I offered cliche
ridden wisdom.

“ I already did. It is a full flight. Sorry to ask you.” She tries to
shrink herself in the seat as I mumble half-audible apologies and go back
to watching the antics of Deadpool.

Somewhere in the riveting superhero adventures, I have dozed off. There is
this back-of-mind recognition that I should try and sleep as much as I can
to avoid thinking about the slow cramp building in my right calf. Even as I
am ignoring the cocoon like reborn tightness of the posture, I feel like my
world is shrinking in.

The girl next to me has raised the arm-rest between us and is now spilling
over in my heavily restricted real-estate. Her elbow is definitely poking
against my flab, which, much as I dislike, is still mine and not used to
this kind of bruising assaults. Her legs are at an awkward angle, knocking
against my octopussian knees.

After 5 minutes of semi dreaming that I had reincarnated as a scratching
post, I open my eyes in complaint. I see her wide awake, not blinking, and
crouching towards me, subjecting me to unsolicited reflexology.

As I turn my reprimanding eyes I notice that she is leaving precious inches
on the the other side. Now, I am all for people throwing themselves at me,
and gratified that my charms and attractions are cutting through my hobo
sweater and the dried snugness of long haul flight, but I decided it is
time to draw some boundaries.

Even as I prepare to say something, ungluing the tongue which has of course
retired to the back of the mouth and feels like sand paper, I see her gasp
and draw in a deep breath and her body flinch.

I notice that since I last talked to her, she seemed to have grown extra
appendages. Or rather, there is a hand on her body, grazing the
under-thigh. She squirms to get away from this mutant formation but it is
right there. Insistent. Probing. Squiggling.

And I look at the man on the other side of her. The Chinese bro wearing his
black t-shirt with a silverish neon ‘Ninja’ written on it, his biceps
bulging with perversion, is using this long flight to catch up with his
daily quota of groping women.

Even as I register all this, blinking like I am Mary Poppins, barely able
to register all that I am seeing, he catches my eye. And instead of hastily
correcting himself, he gives me a grin - the kind that belongs to the
bottom of a pond - and winks at me as he very obviously punches her.

In that split second that he does that and she gasps, even before I can
think of anything to say, some involuntary muscles take over. I lean across
the person next to me, and with a wrist action that makes me consider a
future career in professional golfing, I slap the bro hard on his smug
face. It was a slap so hard, it hurt my hand. His designer hipster glasses
fly off his face. While I nurse my aching hand and wonder if I should apply
hand cream to a lid blisters, and you know, because any excuse to apply
hand cream, the woman heaves in relief and starts crying.

The bro, his senses finally returning, starts raising Cain, or whatever the
Chinese equivalence might be. There is an animal roar and he gets us and
shouts at me, apparently wanting to punch me, but the woman was getting in
the. I get up from my seat and ask her to give us some space. In the
meantime, hearing the uproar in the dimmed cabin, the cabin crew, shaken
from their tasks of stealing business class goodies, has assembled all
around us.

The bro, his cheek smarting red, and half crying and half snotting, has
gone into paroxysms of rage and blathering in Mandarin, The young woman,
now freely crying, is garrulously talking to the flight attendant. I am
left standing there, wondering what happens next.

Two cabin crew members take the bro away somewhere. I am presuming secret
dungeons where they keep the snakes. They come back and talk to me and the
woman. We tell what happened. They make notes. They tell us that it is a
full flight so they can’t move us anywhere but they will keep the bro
somewhere away.

They feed us water, and for some strange reason bring us cup noodles.
Ramen, apparently, is protocol comfort food. They talk to us and ask the
woman if she wants to make an official complaint. She waivers. She decides
no. She just wants this to be over and go home.

They now turn to me, I am told that the man is very angry and he wants to
press charges of violence against me. “If he does that, sir, there will be
police in Amsterdam who will meet us at the gates and you might have to
spend some time with them explaining what has happened. “

By now, all my fellow passengers, their boredom interrupted by high power
drama are of course, listening with all their might, and as soon as she
says this, there is another uproar. 5 people, their wrists ready in mimetic
action are angry and shouting in colorful Dutch at the cabin crew
attendants. They are furious that instead of being celebrated for the slap
of the century, I was being threatened with possible police action.

The senior purser calms them down. “ I am not threatening him. I just want
him to know that this is the protocol. But if it happens, I am going to
tell you sir, that the entire crew is going to come with you, and this
young lady, if she wants, can also join us. I want to thank you for doing
this, and I am glad that you did. My hands are tied, but yours aren’t and
we are very proud of this. I don’t want you to worry but I want you to be
prepared.”

Two other passengers now are slapping me on my back and saying that if this
happens, they are also coming with me to the cops. Nothing is going to
happen to me.

We are settling down when the cabin crew comes with glasses of champagne
for me, my neighbor, and the 5 people who had stepped in. I ask sheepishly
if I can change mine for Diet Coke. Hilarity ensues. Things finally settle
down.

An hour before landing, the senior purser comes to me again and tells me
that the bro is not going to make any official charges. We land. As I am
hauling my fat ass out, the pilot stops me at the flight gate and shakes my
hand and thanks me. A basket is shoved into my hands. It has alcohol and
chocolates. Everybody else is looking at me. I am feeling very sheepish.

I get out, holding a festive gift basket. At baggage claim, the young woman
and I are together again. Bags arrive. We are talking and walking out. I
give her the gift basket. She cries a bit. Gives me a hug and a big kiss on
the cheeks.

We say goodbye and disappear into the Schiphol crowd.

I sit on the train and type this. Occasionally looking at my hand with
respect. It obviously has taken carpe jugulum as it’s war cry. I feel like
I am a little afraid, that all those Adams Family cartoons have resulted in
the hand developing a brain of its own. My hand might be cousin It. Also, I
am never going to use the phrase “talk to the hand” ever again, scared of
what it might do when I am not thinking.

-- 

((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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