A writer I once read about said he refused to own a phone,
because he hated the idea that anyone with (at that time) a dime in his pocket
could make a bell ring in your house.
My view on this matter is precisely the same. Telephones?
An unwelcome intrusion.
When I was working outside my house, I would always have the
ringer on the phone in my office turned off, so I would not be interrupted. An “Extension Phone” would ring in an outer
office, it would be answered by an assistant, and the message, if important,
would be conveyed to me, and I’d take things from there, mostly by, if I could
get away with it, saying, “I’ll call them back”, and then not doing it.
The “bell silencing” was an improvement on matters. At least, I would not be startled mid-thought
(or mid-nap) by an ear-shattering “BRINGGGGG!!!”
Well, those joyous days are long gone. I work at home now. And I get a lot of calls. Which I have to answer myself.
“Awwwww.”
How the Mighty have fallen.
Almost none of the phone calls are personal. Mostly, somebody wanted something.
I’d get a call from a guy who wanted to let me in on a hot stock
tip. (I said, “Let me ask you
something. Would you invest in a stock
tip you got from a stranger calling you on the phone?” I recall him saying, “If it’s a good one”, just before I hung up.)
I’d get a call from a woman informing me it was time to get
our air ducts cleaned out. I replied
that I didn’t think it was.
I’d get repeated calls
telling me that a certified contractor was offering free home improvement
estimates in our neighborhood. (It was
never the contractor who called me. It
was always, “My Dad is a certified contractor…” forcing me to hurt two people in
one phone call – the contractor, and his son, who has to report, “He doesn’t want you, Dad.”)
This is a fractional sampling. On a daily basis, I would spend my working
hours writing these posts and, with varying degrees of politeness, depending on
the volume, saying, “No” to an endless barrage of solicitating strangers. I could not imagine anything more
annoying.
Unfortunately, the “Be careful what you wish for” gods got
wind of my complaints, and before I knew it, people calling me on the phone
asking for work or charitable donations abruptly stopped. To be replaced instead by…
Phone solicitations from machines.
Barbara Boxer needs my vote.
(Apparently, however, Senator Barb is too busy to call me herself, as
are her overworked assistants. So
instead, I get a “Robo-call” encouraging me to support a Senator who cares deeply
about people, but not enough to express her concern in any way other than
mechanical.)
“The FBI has
determined that there is a home burglary in this country every fifteen
seconds…”
is another automated “come-on” I receive regularly from Burglar
Alarm Security companies. (A burglary
every fifteen seconds. I look at my
clock, which has a second hand on it. I
am apparently due for a burglary any moment now. I wonder if I should put on some pants.)
“Your Credit Card
company has some important news for you…”
insists still another
pre-recorded alert. It very quickly
turns out that they don’t.
Somehow, I find these non-human
interruptions more ire inducing – not to mention insulting – than solicitations
from actual people, whose flesh-and-blood intrusions I am suddenly starting to
miss. It seems like matters have gone
from bad to worse.
And then, unexpectedly – as unexpected things always are…
The phone in my office stopped working entirely. (Although the rest of the phones in the house
worked fine. Meaning, I now had to race into
another room to answer the unwanted
calls.)
I dial 611 for a “Phone
Service Representative.” Past experience
has taught me that there is one company you call for outside repair service (basically, the phone lines), and another I am required to call if the
problem is inside the house, as the “outside”
people are contractually prohibited from coming in, and the inside people are prohibited from going
out (except when they arrive and when they leave.)
Of course, I have no idea where the problem emanates from,
so it’s “fifty-fifty” that I’ve called the right place.
I make an appointment, and the “Inside Guy” arrives. After a cursory examination, the “Inside Guy”
informs me that I have called the wrong place.
Not because it’s an “Outside Guy” problem – it is not that either – so,
as it turns out, either place I
called would have been wrong.
What it is, I am told, is a “Phone System” problem. Meaning that a private “Phone System Technician”
needed to be called. I am then told I
would be billed for the “in-house” visit.
Even though he didn’t do anything.
Other than inform me I had to call somebody else.
A WORLDWEARY SIGH.
The private phone technicians install an entirely new phone system,
even though the only phone not working was the phone in my office. After more than four hours – and the hundreds
of dollars, required to purchase and install the new system –
The phone in my office continues
not to work.
Finally, desperate for an answer, a rooftop examination of
the wiring connecting my office phone to the outside phone lines revealed that
a small phone plug that led into my office had cracked and broken off. When it was replaced, my office phone
immediately came to life.
Had the private technicians discovered that rooftop plug first, the solution would have been a
replacement plug, rather than an
entirely new phone system.
But there you go.
This story – although I, and perhaps a majority of readers
would like it to be – is not over. A day
later, we discovered that, since our new phone system had been installed, when
receiving “incoming” calls, our phones – all
our phones now – will only ring once, and when we “pick up”, there is nobody on
the line. The phone system technicians have
been called to come back. (The
“outgoing” calling process is just dandy.)
Days of inconvenience.
Major expenditures of money.
And still more to come.
A monumental effort
For the return of a service
I do not even want.
2 comments:
Wait. You have a landline???
I ditched mine years ago. Get a smart phone. Have it on silent. Screen calls.
Expenditures of money? What the hell is wrong with you! Don't pay those bastards a penny! Call those damn companies and insist on speaking with whoever is in charge...um... when your phone starts working.
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