“Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy
and wise.” This is one of the things that I had learnt as a child. Twenty years
of Corporate Career have ensured that I do not have any of the three attributes
mentioned above.
The first few years of corporate life are spent in proving
yourself. 15 hour work days are the norm.
If you leave office at half past five or six, comments about leaving
half day are normal. So the entire day is spent having endless cups of coffee
networking and then working furiously after 5 to impress the boss and other
colleagues. Of course there are fringe benefits like ensuring that your
departure time ‘coincides’ with that of some interesting colleagues. Adds a
little spice to a completely boring life.
Then when you start getting older, the ‘interesting’
colleagues lose interest in you. So now your late evening journey from office
to home gets frequently interrupted at a watering hole. Inherited health, studied wisdom and earned wealth get
sacrificed during the journey from office to home. The accumulated balance of
all the three attributes is very limited. So one fine day, I decided to quit
Corporate life and follow the above wisdom, which I learnt in school.
The time I used to leave from office, is the time I go to
sleep today. The time I used to return home after a party is the time I wake
up. But leaving corporate life ensures, that wealth of the material kind is a
bit scarce.
In order to hoard and save on this scarce commodity, I decided
to go to work by public transport last week. The first stop was a shared auto
rickshaw which would take me to the nearest suburban railway station. I found
myself in the company of two middle aged ladies and a young driver. While I was
busy reading an article on my cell phone, one of the ladies shrieked. The auto
had just avoided an oncoming car. I suddenly realized that we were in the wrong
lane. Majority of the traffic was coming from the other side. It was directly
out of the movie Octopussy, where Vijay Amritraj drove James Bond in an auto at
breakneck speed through the streets of Rajasthan. Fortunately I was not on a
secret mission, nor were we escaping from some gun toting villains.
The next stop was at a traffic signal. We were supposed to
go right, and the signal for us was red. However red lights don’t stop
daredevil auto drivers. At a speed which would put Lewis Hamilton to shame, he swerved
left, cut through the traffic at 90 degrees, took a U-turn and then turned left
to go coolly on his way. All the while listening to Bollywood music.
Finally we decided to protest and interrupt his music
concert. He was grossly irritated at
listening to a sermon early in the morning. He squarely passed the blame on
other commuters. Apparently, in peak hours, commuters pester him to go fast,
break all kinds of traffic rules and ensure that they reach the train station
quickly. He went on to add that this has been a phenomenon, since
fingerprinting has been introduced at the workplace.
Fingerprinting ensures that the entry time is captured
accurately to the second. Thus people coming late are easily identified. In an
era of 15 hour work days, where performance matters, people are still being
pulled up for punctuality. The person who introduced fingerprinting access as a
security feature would never have imagined the risk it could bring with it.
In this race to survive, we are compromising basic safety.
Apparently it is the educated class which is encouraging people the break the
rules. Those of us who drive will vouch that there is no shortage of people
driving on the wrong side of the road. I have had cases, where people are
honking behind me when I stop at a red signal, making me wonder, whether
stopping at a red light is an offence.
On a different note, when I see people in fancy cars
throwing bottles, coffee cups and pieces of paper on the road, I wonder whether
these people are educated. Education is supposed to make the world a better
place. It is also making the world a competitive place. Is it this competition
that is making us lose our basic civic sense? Or is it the power which gives
people a sense of entitlement to do what they wish. And where does power emanate from? Does it
come from money or from position, status? Wherever it comes from, with a brash
display of power especially in simple tasks like not following traffic rules
and littering the roads, what kind of example are we setting for our children?
It is very clear that education does not make us wise. Is it
the rat race that is making us lose our wisdom? The chase of greater profits,
has led to better income, more and bigger cars, better standard of living. But
wisdom is lost and we are chasing material benefits even by putting our lives
in peril.
The standard of living has improved. The standards of living
have fallen.
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