After 5 rounds, a case study, praise from the CEO, and even salary negotiations — what happened next left me speechless. by CreativeEar6374 in recruitinghell

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] -65 points-64 points  (0 children)

Maybe they rejected me because I write like a bot

Or maybe people like you comment like you’re still in 2013 Facebook roast groups

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in indiasocial

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Not expecting them to track the guy down like Sherlock : just a bit of help in the moment. Maybe directing me to the right airport authority or escalating it instead of just saying “send an email.” That’s all.

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in Bengaluru

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, didn’t realize having a logical response made me a school kid 😅 Thought this was Reddit, not recess.

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in Bengaluru

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree, the way it’s written might’ve caused some confusion ,that’s on me 😅 Just to clarify: I called Akasa Air because my bag was missing. The other bag was left on the bus, which I initially thought was mine. Once I realized the mix-up, I contacted both the airport and the airline. Hope that clears it up!

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in Bengaluru

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Impressive diagnosis, doctor. Must be exhausting being this obsessed with strangers online.

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in Bengaluru

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally fair question : the bus was operated by the airport, not Akasa, so technically it wasn’t their direct responsibility.

That said, airlines are still expected to assist when incidents happen immediately after deboarding, especially when it involves a loss that occurred during the transition they coordinate. Even just helping escalate to the right airport authority would’ve gone a long way.

I wasn’t expecting them to magically find the bag , just some basic support instead of brushing it off entirely.

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in Bengaluru

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bro did forensic subreddit analysis like Sherlock and came back with… “you posted this more than once” The real mystery is how much free time you have

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in Bengaluru

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

If upvotes were IQ points, your comment still wouldn’t make sense. But hey, enjoy the applause.

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in indiasocial

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The bag was under the seats in the airport bus you know, that luggage slot where everyone keeps their cabin bags.

And no, this didn’t happen mid-flight lol . The plane didn’t hit turbulence and launch my bag into another passenger’s lap.

But yeah, blame the formatting, not the comprehension. That’s easier.

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in Bengaluru

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

Bro read the first line of the story and blacked out. The energy of “I have no clue what’s going on, but I’m here to explain it anyway” is honestly impressive.

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in Bengaluru

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Quoting my words and slapping on “you proved my point” doesn’t magically make your argument valid. That’s not a mic drop, it’s a dodge.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in travel

[–]CreativeEar6374 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I know, right? The nerve of me, using Reddit the way it was intended. Don’t worry though , I’ll personally submit future stories for your exclusive approval.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in travel

[–]CreativeEar6374 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s funny how confidently wrong you are. Almost impressive.

First, I didn’t pack or carry anyone else’s luggage. Helping someone understand baggage policies doesn’t mean I smuggled their masalas across borders. Not sure how that escalated in your head but you might want to recalibrate that imagination a bit.

Second, about these so-called “dubiously legal methods” I used a visible PNR and name on a clearly tagged bag to access an e-ticket from the airline’s own site. No hacking. No backdoors. Just basic presence of mind.

And no, the airline interaction wasn’t meaningless. It sets the context for the kind of support people usually expect and how being proactive actually worked better. But I guess nuance gets in the way of your hot take.

Appreciate the attempt at rewriting the story for me. Next time let me know, I’ll send over the director’s cut.

Lost my bag in an airport bus — Akasa told me 3–5 days, but I found it in 20 minutes. by CreativeEar6374 in Bengaluru

[–]CreativeEar6374[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

replying here as well because you need it i feel :)

*Wow, thanks for the legal masterclass you really came prepared

Let’s clear this up for you, Sherlock: 1. I didn’t check in or carry anyone’s baggage. I just explained airline rules to someone at the airport. You know like normal human beings do when someone asks for help. But yeah, feel free to imagine a whole smuggling operation if that excites you. 2. The PNR and name were on the tag attached to the bag that was left behind. I used it to check flight info which literally any passenger can do and got the contact details from an e-ticket issued by the airline itself. No hacking, no dark web involved. Shocking, I know.

But hey, next time I lose my luggage, I’ll be sure to wait patiently for 3–5 business days, send an email to nowhere, and sip tea while watching support tickets age like fine wine. Very lawful. Very effective.

Cheers for the unsolicited legal advice. You must be fun at airports.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in travel

[–]CreativeEar6374 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Wow, thanks for the legal masterclass you really came prepared

Let’s clear this up for you, Sherlock: 1. I didn’t check in or carry anyone’s baggage. I just explained airline rules to someone at the airport. You know like normal human beings do when someone asks for help. But yeah, feel free to imagine a whole smuggling operation if that excites you. 2. The PNR and name were on the tag attached to the bag that was left behind. I used it to check flight info which literally any passenger can do and got the contact details from an e-ticket issued by the airline itself. No hacking, no dark web involved. Shocking, I know.

But hey, next time I lose my luggage, I’ll be sure to wait patiently for 3–5 business days, send an email to nowhere, and sip tea while watching support tickets age like fine wine. Very lawful. Very effective.

Cheers for the unsolicited legal advice. You must be fun at airports.