As some readers might remember (at least now that I remind you), last week I found out that in order to renew my "Mobile Bank ID", I first needed to get a physical National ID card (a kind of ID card that I've never needed before).
So for that purpose, I had booked an appointment today at our local police station - from my point of view situated in a street "across the city centre", and with no really helpful bus connections from where I live. I contemplated taking a taxi, but as the snow is gone and it wasn't really raining (just foggy on the verge of a light drizzle), I decided to walk. It took me about 40 min. My knee felt fairly ok, but I'm still far from "speedwalking"...
The mural above is on a wall along a sidestreet near the police station. It's been there for a number of years by now, but it's not a place I usually walk by.
I arrived about 20 min before my 12 o'clock appointment, and checked in digitally on a machine. Just then there were only a few more visitors in the waiting room, but all 'cubicles' seemed to be closed. After a while I came to the conclusion that the staff must be on their lunch break. In the meantime, more people kept arriving, so at 12, when they opened again, all seats in the waiting room were taken, plus a lot of people standing as well. As I had a booked appointment I did not have to wait long after they opened, though. (Most people were probably there to collect previously ordered IDs, which does not require pre-booking.)
It's been almost a decade since I last visited the police station for a similar errand (then a passport), and my memories of the procedures then are vague. But what somewhat surprised me now was the absence of a couple of items that I would have found helpful: A hook to hang my coat on, and a mirror to at least be able to check my hair before having my photo taken by staring into a blank (but not reflective) screen. Fingerprinting no longer involves ink, and they only wanted my index fingers - but (interestingly) I needed to do one of them thrice before the police office was satisfied. (Do fingerprints wear out with age? Answer at the bottom of the post...) *
And then of course I had to write my name with a digital pen, which felt oddly clumsy, and made my signature look that too. The officer then briefly showed me what the document was going to look like (too small for me to really see properly) and asked if I was satisfied. I said I was definitely not satisfied with my hair... But probably everyone says that, because he seemed to take that as an acceptance anyway, and told me I'll get a message when I can pick it up (in a week or so)...
Walking away, I made a mental decision that when my driving license is up for renewal next year, I will make sure to do that. (I don't really drive any more, but it's accepted as ID in most everyday situations, even if not for the digital bank ID. And for the driving license one is still allowed to go to a professional photographer to have one's photo taken...
The way back home seemed very long. I looked in at the pharmacy for a short errand (some non-prescription stuff), but then decided to see if I could catch a bus part of the way. There is no bus that takes me "all the way" these days, but I managed to catch one that shortened the way a little bit (two stops). With a little detour to a neighbourhood corner shop for some fruit and vegs, I was home again at 1 pm, amost exactly two hours after I left.
The whole adventure had me so tired that after a quick lunch (microwaved leftovers, and salad from yesterday), I fell asleep for a couple of hours in the afternoon...
And now it's just about bedtime for real!
*) AI tells me: "Yes, fingerprints can wear out or become less distinct with age, largely due to reduced skin elasticity, thinning skin, and the flattening of ridges. While the underlying pattern remains fixed, these changes often make it harder to capture clear prints in older individuals " (And I suppose I have to accept that at age 70, that's what I now am...)

wait until your fingerprints are 81 years old. mine are all but GONE. I found out this info when I got the iPad 2 years ago and it could not take my finger prints. I had to try different fingers. at the time it liked both of my thumbs, now it doesn't like my thumbs and only liked my pointer fingers.. have not tried the pinkie fingers. maybe its from all the typing on computers..
ReplyDeletethat was quite the adventure getting the ID... and we got a new mural that I have not seen before. I do love all your murals in your city.
Sandra, I have never used fingerprints with my phone or tablets, so have not been aware of that age-change until now!
DeleteThis whole process was certainly an adventure. And I had no idea about the fingerprints of seniors!
ReplyDeleteGinny, I was kind of relieved to find the info. Probably not the first time the police came across that "problem", then.
DeleteFor all that it entailed, being out for just two hours seems quick! Good to use this errand as another "testing ground" of your walking strength, and equally good that you had the opportunity to shorten the walk by taking the bus for a bit.
ReplyDeleteWhen my sister and I had to have passports made in order to travel to the UK after Brexit (up until then, our national ID card was sufficient), we had a lot of "fun" with the photo machine at the townhall, where we usually need to go for such things (not the police)... We had both arrived neatly combed and even with a hint of makeup so that we'd look reasonably nice on the photo and not like a dead body just found in the river. But the machine acted up on us and made us go back and forth through the entire process several times until in the end we were both a little dishevelled, with my sister's hair sticking out in all directions what little lip gloss I was wearing all gone!
Meike, after this long winter those two hours felt like double the time to me! - We have no choice here any more when it comes to passport and National ID photos, they have to be taken on the spot at the police station when applying. And one is not allowed to wear glasses in the photo. Knowing that from two previous passports, I did put on a bit of discreet eye makeup, which I normally don't bother about these days. As for my hair, though, I needed to wear a hat outdoors, and then take that off without access to a mirror, so... ;)
DeleteI didn't know that fingerprints 'wore out.' That is extraordinary.
ReplyDeleteI don't think anyone is ever satisfied with official identity photographs - we all look like criminals.
Janice, I'd never heard of that about the fingerprints before either. (Can't recall Sherlock Holmes or Hercule Poirot ever mentioning it!)
DeleteAnd yes, I agree about the police photos having a tendency to make one look like a criminal. Next, perhaps they'll also want to add a profile photo to the ID card... ;)
It's interesting that you go to a police station to renew ID. We tend to just go to the post office, that's where I did my driving licence last.
ReplyDeleteCK, it's always (in my lifetime) been the police that handle passport applications here, and now also the National ID cards which are a simpler form of passport valid within the EU.
DeleteI remember having to take my glasses off when I had my lost ID card replaced about 6-7 years ago. The resulting photo made me look like Roseanne Barr (from TV) and looks nothing like me now that I have lost weight and grown my hair long. But it is still accepted wherever it is needed.
ReplyDeleteRiver, on passport photos from the previous century I have my glasses on. But rules have changed and now one has to take them off.
DeleteSo glad to see the mural. That's quite a story about getting the new i.d. I need to spend time doing so, in order to fly anywhere we are supposed to have a new i.d. Here we go to the Driver's License office to get them. Maybe I should check to see if I need an appointment.
ReplyDeleteBarbara, our driver's licenses are handled by a separate authority/agency, but passports and National ID (a sort of simplified/limited passport) by the police. I'm exaggerating the "drama" of course, I was just surprised to suddenly find out that I needed it to be able to renew my digital bank id (new rule).
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