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World in a mad rush! | By Khalid Saleem

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World in a mad rush!

IF asked to pinpoint one grievous malady that the world suffers from, one would not be far off the mark if one were to point the finger at the fetish of SPEED.

As one looks around, all one sees is one mad rush.Everyone and his uncle appear to be in a frightful hurry. They all behave as if they have an express train to catch.

Not any train, mind you, but apparently one that if missed could conceivably lead to earth-shaking consequences – if not worse.

One asks oneself, has something occurred lately, unbeknown to one, to put life on this blessed planet in a faster gear, to borrow a motoring phrase?

The oft-mentioned ‘global warming’ or possibly the much-vaunted ‘globalization’ may well have something to do with it.

Be that as it may, one cannot help having a constant queasy feeling of being left behind.

As one looks over one’s shoulder, all one sees is the rest of the world whizzing past at an awful speed.

The whole scenario makes one not only dizzy but also a bit nostalgic for the rather relaxed pace of yesteryears.

Not that this does one any good. In actual fact, one has the ominous feeling that things are going to get worse, before they ever get better.

The erstwhile tempo of life that was at once relaxed and steady, regrettably now appears to be a thing of the past – perhaps never to return.

One can only grin and bear it while, at the same time, hoping for the best. Man’s mad quest for speed may yet prove to be his undoing!

Take the instance of a most common everyday occurrence: the meal. Remember the time when mealtime used to be a most pleasurable occasion – to be leisurely savoured and enjoyed.

Alas, no more!People have started eating faster. Gulping down food in the shortest possible time is becoming something of a fad these days.

Relaxed and leisurely meals of yesteryears are no more than a pleasant memory. To look at the younger generation at mealtime, it would appear that eating is nothing more than an unpleasant duty to be got over with an indecent haste.

The spawning of fast-food joints – much like poisonous mushrooms after rains – is nothing short of appalling.

These disagreeable establishments dish out food at a feverish pace with the declared objective of it being gulped down at an even quicker speed.

Before the customer realizes, he or she is lighter in the pocket, heavier in the stomach and none the wiser for it!

Of course, it makes good business sense for those who run these establishments, given their phenomenal turnover.

As always, it is the customer who is at the receiving end. The phrase ‘eating out’ had such a pleasant and pleasurable connotation all its own.

Before the fast-food joints made their appearance and ruined it all, this used to be one of those most pleasant experiences that were looked forward to by the whole family.

The fast-food revolution has taken the magic out of these, once pleasurable, interludes leaving them instead humdrum and, indeed, dreary.

One alludes to the fast-food fad merely as an illustration.Speed appears to have pervaded all aspects of life. Everywhere one looks all one discerns is hurry.

One cannot help inquiring: what is the hurry about?Is it because they have a deadline to meet? Or, is it just the excitement of living dangerously that motivates our daredevil motorists?

What our racing heroes tend to forget is that speed has a character all its own. Once it takes over, it is the master.

One may also make mention of the phenomenal rise in the number of vehicles plaguing the roads these days.

Thanks to the much-vaunted macro-economic planning every Tom, Dick and Harry can now walk into a bank and get a car loan.

How these loans are to be paid off is of little concern to our planning experts who cannot see beyond their bloated noses.

While on this subject, one may well ask why do the manufacturers of these new-fangled vehicles design them to run at speeds faster than the demands of safety?

It is not unusual for the dashboard of a new model car – even a family vehicle – to show a maximum speed of 250 kilometres an hour.

Do the manufacturers, in all seriousness, expect a family to be driven around at such a breakneck speed?

Then, how many countries in the world have roads good enough to allow such high speed? These are but random instances.Speed is threatening all aspects of human existence. People are living their life at a much faster pace.

Educational institutions are driving young children at a rate which is hardly conducive to good education.

Speed-reading is being encouraged – and that by people who should know better. People are even talking faster.No aspect of life remains untouched by the fetish of speed.

It would be understandable if it were to improve the quality of life. But this is hardly the case. It is speed more than anything else which has taken the spice out of life.

It is not expedient to be unmindful of the truism that it is invariably the slow and steady that triumph in the long run.

The defenders of ‘technological progress at any cost’ would argue that with things moving faster, life has become more efficient and streamlined.

Maybe it has; but at what cost?Is efficiency, then, to be the end all, be all of human existence? What about the quality of life? Has the mad rush made life any the richer? What speed may have given to life by way of proficiency, it has taken away in terms of quality.

What is needed is a decision where to draw the line. But, then, who would be the arbiter? That, one is afraid, opens up an entirely new line of enquiry.

— The writer is a former Ambassador and former Assistant Secretary General of OIC.

 

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