THE WARMTH OF YOUR WORDS
About
ten minutes before my morning lecture, today, Ritesh* sent me this sms:
“Gd mng sir. I just left home;
will be late for class by 5 min.
Hope, you don’t mind, sir.
Thanks.”
I replied, immediately, “No
problem, Ritesh. Come.”
Meanwhile, I got another sms…
This one was from Heena*:
“Can’t come for class at 4 today.
When to come tmro?”
I did not reply to her for two
hours. Then, I sent this one:
“At 4 tmro.”
Actually, Heena’s message was in
this shape:
“Can’t cum 4clss at4 2dy wen2 cum
2mro???”
That’s okay… I would have still
replied her, immediately. But, what made me a bit ‘sick’ was the plain apathy…
the indifference… the insensitivity… the lack of respect, if I should put it in
an old-fashioned way.
“Sir, I can’t cum 4clss at4 tdy.
Can u pl tell me wen can i come 2mro?”… Or, “Sir I am sorry, I am not able to
attend the class today at 4. Can I attend anytime tmor at ur convenience, sir. Appreciate, if u let me
know. Thanks.”
There were many more ways in
which Heena could have impressed me. But, not with this:
“Can’t cum 4clss at4 2dy wen2 cum
2mro???”
Now,
tell me. Who should change: my 16-year-old student, Heena or her 54-year-old,
sir? Should the student change the way she writes her message? Or, should the
teacher change the way he reads the message?
By the way, Ritesh, too, is just
17… goes to one of the ‘town-side’ colleges… He, too, has a fine cell-phone and
scores of ‘cool’ friends. But, then, who taught him to type his message the way
he did?
“Gd mng sir. I just left home;
will be late for class by 5 min. Hope, you don’t mind, sir. Thanks.”
“Come.” This can be a command,
an order… or, it can be a warm invitation, a kind assurance, “It is okay beta,
if u are late by 5 minutes… Please come… I will take you in.” Yes, whether “Come”
is an order or a warm, kind invitation… is decided by how it is conveyed:
“No problem, Ritesh. Come.”
We are busy people… Aren’t we?
So, a student is too busy to add in her message
‘Sir’, ‘please’ or ‘thanks’…
and, a teacher is too busy to add in his message
‘Heena/Ritesh/beta…
or, ‘it is okay’ or ‘No problem’.
“Move with the times,” many advise
me. I do… Yes, I do.
But, my heart is still old-fashioned… The
warmth of your words keeps it alive and young. Heena, please let your
Blackberry know this.
“It is okay Heena… Please come for
class tomorrow at 4. Love.”
*Names
have been changed
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pics.: Supriya Chavan
Comments
- Utpal