dear friends,
please read the following mail send by poet k.satchidanandan
regards
gp.ramachandran


Friends, I was moved by this article, as I had been when I read Milan
Kundera's SLOWNESS. Do read it,s-l-o-w-l-y.
Satchi

________________________________

>From the Faraway Nearby
Finding Time
The fast, the bad, the ugly, the alternatives
by Rebecca Solnit
Published in the September/October 2007 issue of Orion magazine


THE FOUR HORSEMEN OF MY APOCALYPSE are called Efficiency, Convenience,
Profitability, and Security, and in their names, crimes against
poetry, pleasure, sociability, and the very largeness of the world are
daily, hourly, constantly carried out. These marauding horsemen are
deployed by technophiles, advertisers, and profiteers to assault the
nameless pleasures and meanings that knit together our lives and
expand our horizons. I'm listening to a man on the radio describe how
great it is that there are websites where musicians who have never met
or conversed or had any contact at all can lay down tracks together to
make songs. While the experiment sounds interesting, the assumption
sounds scary--that the complex personal, creative, and cultural
collaborations of music-making could be unnecessary and you just need
the digital conjunction of some skill sets. The speaker seems to
believe that the sole goal is the production of songs, sundered from
the production of social ties and social pleasure. But music has
always been an occasion for people to get together--in rehearsals,
nightclubs, parties, festivals, park band-shells, parades, and other
social spaces. It is often the soundtrack to bodies in conjunction,
whether marching or making love.
Ensemble music made in solitude is a very different thing; as a norm
it signifies a loss. The loss is subtle and hard to describe,
especially compared to the wonders of what can be uploaded,
downloaded, and Googled, and the convenience and safety of never
leaving your house or never meeting a stranger. The radio rave comes a
few days after I talk to a book editor who's trying to articulate what
goes missing when you go to Amazon.com for books: the absence of the
opportunities for browsing, for finding what you don't know you're
looking for or can't describe in a key-word search. A digital
storefront can lead you to your goal if you know exactly how to spell
it, but it shows you next to nothing on the way; it prevents your
world from getting significantly or surprisingly larger. The virtual
version rips out the heart of the thing, shrink-wraps it, sticks a
barcode on, and throws the rest away. This horseman is called
Efficiency. He is followed by the horseman called Profitability. Along
with Convenience, they trample underfoot the subtle encounters that
suffuse a life with meaning.
The problem is partly one of language. The language of commerce has
been engineered to describe the overt purpose of a thing, but cannot
encompass fringe benefits or peripheral pleasures. It weighs the
obvious against what in its terms are incomprehensible. When I drive
from here to there, speed, privacy, control, and safety are easy to
claim. When I walk, what happens is more vague, more ambiguous--and in
many circumstances much richer. I am out in the world. It's exercise,
though not so quantifiably as on a treadmill in a gym with a digital
readout. It's myriad little epiphanies and encounters that knit me
more tightly into my place and maybe enhance the place overall. The
carbon emissions are essentially nil. Many more benefits are more
subjective, more ethereal--and more wordy. You can't describe them in
a few familiar phrases; and if you're not practiced at describing
them, you may not be able to articulate them at all. It is difficult
to value what cannot be named. Since someone makes money every time
you buy a car or fill it up, there's a whole commercial language built
around getting us to drive; there's little or no language promoting
the free act of walking. Have you not driven a Ford lately?
Even the idea of security illustrates the constant conflict between
the familiar and the intricate. When I drive, I have a large steel and
glass carapace wrapped around me and my contact with other human
beings is largely limited to colliding with their large metal
carapaces at various speeds or their unbuffered bodies in crosswalks.
Fifty thousand or so people a year are killed by cars in this country,
but its citizens officially believe that safety lies in the lack of
contact that cars offer. Walkers make a place safer for the whole
community--what Jane Jacobs called "eyes on the street"--and in turn
become more street-smart themselves. Too, safety is a reductive term
for what being at home in the world or the neighborhood can provide.
This is a more nebulous kind of security, but a deeper and broader
one. It is marked by expansiveness, not defensiveness.
Walking versus driving is an easy setup, but the same problem applies
to most of the technological changes we embrace and many of the
material and spatial ones. The gains are simple and we know the
adjectives: convenient, efficient, safe, fast, predictable,
productive. All good things for a machine, but lost in the list is the
language to argue that we are not machines and our lives include all
sorts of subtleties--epiphanies, alliances, associations, meanings,
purposes, pleasures--that engineers cannot design, factories cannot
build, computers cannot measure, and marketers will not sell. What we
cannot describe vanishes into the ether, and so what begins as a
problem of language ends as one of the broadest tragedies of our
lives.
This is most manifest in the life of the suburban commuter who weekly
spends a dozen or more hours on the road between the putative dream
house and the workplace, caught in the gridlock of tens of thousands
likewise trying to move from the residential-warehousing periphery to
the economically productive inner rings. Space is quantifiable and we
are constantly taught to covet it (though leisure is advertised
too--mostly as vacation packages). You can own those two thousand
square feet including two-car garage, and it is literally real, the
real in real estate. But to have this space you give up time, the time
that you might be spending with the kids who are housed in the image
of domestic tranquility but not actually particularly well nurtured by
their absentee parents, or time spent immersed in community life or
making things with your own hands or doing nothing at all--a lost art.
You give up time, and you often give up the far more than two thousand
square feet that you don't own but get to enjoy when you live in, say,
a rented apartment in a neighborhood full of amenities nobody
advertised to you, because you don't have to buy the public pool or
playground that your kids don't need to be driven to. The language of
real-estate ownership is loud, clear, and drilled into us daily; the
language of public life and leisure time is rarer and more complex.

People elsewhere are better at this language. At a certain fork in the
road of automatization, Europeans chose to have more time, and they
work far less than we do and get much longer vacations. We chose to
have more stuff, the stuff sold to us through those beckoning
adjectives--bigger, better, faster: Jet Skis, extra cars, second
homes, motor homes, towering slab TVs, if not the time to enjoy them
or to enjoy less commodified pleasures. These may be the wages of
inarticulateness.
The conundrum is that the language to describe the ineffable splendors
and possibilities of our lives takes time to master, takes a certain
unhurried engagement with the tasks of description, assessment,
critique, and conversation; that to speak this slow language you must
slow down, and to slow down you must have some inkling of what you
will gain by doing so. It's not an elite language; nomadic and remote
tribal peoples are now quite good at picking and choosing from
development's cascade of new toys, and so are some of the cash-poor,
culture-rich people in places like Louisiana. Poetry is good training
in speaking it, and skepticism is helpful in rejecting the four
horsemen of this apocalypse, but they both require a mind that likes
to roam around and the time in which to do it.
Ultimately, I believe that slowness is an act of resistance, not
because slowness is a good in itself but because of all that it makes
room for, the things that don't get measured and can't be bought.
Rebecca Solnit tried to write about the uses of the unpredictable and
the immeasurable in her book A Field Guide to Getting Lost. Before
that she wrote a history of walking.



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