And one more part of our lives bites the dust

~ a column by Colleen O’Brien

Into my new bank I go. A couple of people are standing, talking to computer screens. A smiling person on the screen talks to them.

 There are no tellers, and it’s not lunchtime.

I wander over to a screen and look at it. What am I supposed to do?

  A 30-something guy walks out of a door in the back of the lobby, where I stand with the computers and the two people conversing with an onscreen person.

The man says to me, “Hi, I’m Jaha, how can I help you?” He has a nice smile and a sincere voice.

“Hi, Jaha,” I say. “My name’s Colleen. I need to cash a check.”

“Punch the START button,” he says, as he points to the computer in front of me.

I do so, and a guy appears on the screen. “Hi, my name is Alex. How can I help you?”

“How may you help me,” I correct him.

He continues smiling. I wonder if he’s a robot who was programmed with bad grammar.

“I need to cash a check,” I say.

Jaha has disappeared, apparently okay with my budding transaction with a screen person.

“Is this check from someone else?” asks the screen man. “Or are you writing a check on your account, which you don’t have to do, just say your account number.”

“I don’t know that number right off the top of my head; where do I find it?

  “On your statement.”

   “I didn’t happen to bring that with me to cash a check.”

“It’s on your check,” says the embodiment of some person whom I/m now thinking of as Alex-on-Screen.

“I didn’t bring my check book. This is a check to me, not from me.

“Okay,” Alex-on-Screen says, happy as a clam. “Just slide your check you want to cash into the slot.

I look at what’s right before me below the screen of the smiling maybe human Alex. “Uh, which slot?”

 “Well, the one right in front of you.”

  I try several areas that kind of look like they might be a slot, and the last one eats my check.

  “I think it’s now in the slot,” I say.

   “Yes, Colleen! You got it!”

   Have I won the lottery?

 “How do you want the bills?” Alex-on-Screen asks.

  I say, “Five 20s, ten 10s, twenty 5s and whatever is left, I’d like in ones.”

  “Fine!”

   There is a pause. I wait.

    Alex-on-Screen says, in a melancholy voice, “We, uh, don’t have any twenties right now. Or tens.”

    I’m a tad shocked. “This is a bank, isn’t it?” I ask.

    “I will give you two hundreds for the 20s and 10s,” Alex-on-Screen says, back to his happy voice.

 “I’m cashing this check for a road trip I’m taking tomorrow,” I say, “and I don’t really want to pay with hundred-dollar bills when I stop to get gas and only want a bag of Cheetos, which is a stupid thing for me to put on my credit card.”

 “Well, Colleen [like he’s my friend], you can take the hundreds over to the counter, and a teller will help you.”

I turn around to the teller counter. There are no tellers.

As I swivel back to Alex-on-Screen, Jaha emerges again from his door in the background. “I’ll help you, Ma’am. The tellers are on lunchbreak.”

I get up, smiling at him, wondering what business entity sends its employees on lunchbreak all at once.

I follow Jaha to the normal teller-type counter, he takes my two one-hundred-dollar bills and goes into a back room, comes out and counts out five 20s and ten 10s.

He comes ‘round the counter, and as I head for the door, stuffing my bills into my purse, we, for some reason, start a conversation about how iffy it is driving around a city right now. “Everyone is so aggressive,” Jaha says.

 “And they don’t use their signals to make a turn,” I say. “And they like to cut me off and ride my ass.”

He looks at me in shock; I am an over-80-year-old — quite obviously so — and he is having a difficult time accepting the fact that I can swear.

“Well,” Jaha says, “there are too many angry folks out there driving cars.”

I say, “Ya know, Jaha? Why they’re angry?”

“No,” says the kind Jaha.

“Because they’ve been to a bank like this.”

 He laughs; he can’t quit laughing.

 I drive away, hoping he tells his higher-ups what’s wrong with Artificial Intelligence.

~~

On Mother’s Day, I’m talking to my son on the phone, and I tell him about this encounter.

His response is flat-out honest and chilling: “Mom, the world is going to be AI, and your children’s generation gets it. As soon as your generation is gone, no one will care that there are no more tellers.”

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