Friday, October 14, 2011

STRETCHABLE TIME

TIME CAN EXPAND OR CONTRACT, DEPENDING ON HOW ENGAGED YOU ARE IN YOUR WORK


Aking wanted the perfect groom for his daughter. So he travelled to the abode of the gods to find out who the most perfect man ever created was. When he returned with the information, the world had changed dramatically: a hundred years had passed, his daughter and his entire family had died and no one remembered him. He then learned that time flows faster in the realm of the gods and a day there equals a hundred years on earth.
In another story, the gods asked a hermit to fetch them a pot of water. As the hermit dipped the pot in the water, he saw a beautiful girl. He fell in love with her and asked her to marry him. She agreed immediately and so the hermit became a householder and had children by the woman, and the children had children of their own. In his old age, there was suddenly a great flood. The river broke its banks and washed everything away: his home, his children, his grandchildren, even his wife. He was left ashore alone, without anything, when suddenly he heard the gods shout, “Please pull out the pot and give us the water!” The hermit realised he had been dreaming all along.
In the first story, what seems like a day turns out to be a lifetime while in the second story, what seems like a lifetime turns out to be a second. In the former, time contracts. In the latter, time expands. This is a common theme in Hindu mythology. What makes time change qualitatively is attention. When you are concentrating, time contracts. When you are not concentrating, time expands.
Nikhilesh loves working with Mark. Mark has the ability to turn every project into a game with so much fun that everyone comes early to work, leaves late and no one feels tired. Time passes quickly and weekends feel boring and terrible. Nikhilesh does not speak of worklife balance; work is life and life is work. His wife enjoys seeing Nikhilesh this way, as he brings the energy and joy of work back home, to everybody’s delight.
But Nikhilesh had a very different experience when he worked with Dinakar. Dinakar was no fun. Every meeting was a drag. Everybody had to fill in long reports and long forms. Everything was read and discussed, but no one really paid attention. Every minute of the meeting was documented and filed and circulated. It was torture to go to work and a joy to return home. But the boredom and irritable mood at office travelled home and Nikhilesh would often snap at his wife.
Mark managed to contract time by making everything a joyful activity. Dinakar expanded time by making everything a boring chore. Time passes fast when we are having a good time. Time moves slowly when we are not.
The best way to see figure out organisational culture is to see how people behave during lunchtime. If they are eagerly waiting for the break, it means time is passing slowly at their workstations. If they forget the lunch break, then they clearly are doing something at the workstation that they’re enjoying a lot. Time is constantly contracting and expanding at the workplace.
[ The author is the Chief Belief Officer of the Future Group who can
reached at devdutt@devdutt.com]

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