THE GREEKS AND THE GEEKS
I am a teacher… So, I insist on these things with my students:
I insist on attendance. I insist on being on
time. I also insist on a good communication.
It takes some time for them to grasp fully the importance
of these three values:
Be there for every lecture. This means, once you
keep your foot in, you have no option but to remain totally committed.
Be there on time... before time. This means, you
have no business to keep other people waiting.
And, if you really cannot attend, or be on time,
please inform. This means, you need to have the basic courtesy of picking up
your phone to communicate your problem… I am just human; I cannot know your
problem unless you communicate about it to me… If you don’t, I start waiting,
guessing, assuming and fuming.
The young ones do understand the value of being
regular, punctual… responsible and communicative. Yes, most of them realize the
importance of these values, and, undoubtedly, it tells on their performance
graph.
And, there are some, who don’t.
Many years
ago, there was this young student of mine. I had taught him for four years till
he had graduated from one of the finest commerce colleges in our city. The boy
was an all-rounder, well informed and was lot into intra-college and
inter-college events. Still, he would value my classes… and, make it a point to
meet me before the events, discuss with me about his clash of schedule and try
to negotiate with me … but, all the time taking full responsibility for his
actions. He would never miss a class without talking to me… would not come a
minute late for the class without calling me on my landline or sending a
message through his friends.
Those were not the days of cell-phones. One had
to depend on the landline… or messengers like his parents, friends or neighbors.
This young man would always communicate. And, because he was responsible and
communicative – and, because he had the right attitude – I would go out of my
way to accommodate him; often, I would call him separately and teach.
I remember, at least, half-a-dozen times, his
father had come to me, personally, to communicate about his son’s inability to
attend or be on time. What would humble me – and make me feel delightful – was
the fact that the father was the CEO of a big company; he would come to my place
by his chauffeur-driven car… Yes, just to inform me that his college-going son
would be unable to attend or be on time!
Was there a need to do that?
I think, yes, there was.
There still is!
Because, today - after twenty years - this young
boy heads a company even bigger than his father did those days!
And, let me tell you this: I always had this
feeling running through my gut that, one day, this young man would be where he is today!
For the
past few days, I have been trying to tell two of my young students – a boy and
a girl from eleventh standard this: “Hey kids, you possess with you the latest
Blackberry (girl) and i-phone (boy). Now, possess in your hearts, also, the
most expensive value – the importance of communication!”
They have been making me wait, guess, assume… and
fume. A week has already gone by… and, they still haven’t grasped the
importance of owning this value. Even though they possess the finest piece of technology,
and even though the communication is just a call or a sms away… these young
kids are still in their own world.
Yes, so far, that is.
I am a teacher… and, I am an optimist. I should
keep trying to inculcate this value in my young students. And, I would.
And, I really hope, my young students would
appreciate what I am trying to do…
What
applied thousands of years ago… still applies today. The battle of Marathon took place about five-hundred years before
Christ. The legend has it that the Greek messenger, Pheidippides, had run from
the battle fields of Marathon to the city of Athens to give the news of victory to his
King. Yes, the legend tells us, that, this simple soldier had run, non-stop,
for all twenty-six-mile distance! Just to give the news… Just to communicate!
We still celebrate this moment of history –
rather, legend – all inspired by this tale of communication.
“My dear young Geeks,
you need to run like
that Greek soldier, Pheidippides,”
I feel like screaming at these kids
with mod gadgets,
“You need
to run wearing his legendary attitude,
his zest… and his passion.
Communication is not even a phone-call away...
Just a heart-beat!
GERAL D’CUNHA
Pics.: Arathi Rourniyar
Comments
Keep reading.
Love.
GERRY
Just loved the way you have ramed the entire essence of communication. :)
My regards, always
Bhavika chhabria