Quantum Learning Rotating Header Image

Posts Tagged ‘contact’

A World Of Deals And Exchanges

What happened to altruism and generosity? The sheer pleasure of giving without any expectation of getting something in return.

Oh Ian! You’re so naive!” the cynic may cry and then quote some well worn epithet:

You scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours

or

There’s no such thing as a free lunch

Well, I think it’s sad!

I noticed it very clearly yesterday evening. I went with Elena, my daughter (6), to a restaurant to meet some friends for a few hours. I was watching how easily Elena made contact with people. I think by the end of the evening she knew all the staff in the restaurant, to the point she was helping one of the waitresses serve the tables. I found it wonderful seeing her proudly take bread baskets to the customers.

Then on the way home, as we waited at the bus stop, she befriended a middle aged lady. I’m not quite sure how she did it but by the time we’d got off (coincidentally at the same stop) she’d recounted her life story to the obviously enraptured lady.

None of this was in any way exceptional to my little one, just another day out meeting people and sharing a few important stories from her life. There was no hint of a suggestion that she might want something in exchange other than the pleasure she got from smiling, chatting and helping.

It’s natural – not learned.

I’m such a proud father!

I’d like to take credit that it’s how I’ve raised her but I honestly think it’s natural. In the innocence of childhood we are not suspicious of others and wondering what they want from us. We’re not scared to smile freely and give of ourselves with no expectation of getting something back.

As children grow up they learn to behave differently. And where do they learn that?

It is us adults that teach our children to be suspicious, to negotiate for things, to do deals and to withhold themselves. It is us adults that have a hard time making effortless connection with people we meet day to day. It is us adults that transform the perfectly natural and innocent approach of our children into something more selfish and based on a mentality of scarcity.

It’s all about exchange

We’ve become so used to turning everything into an exchange we’ve forgotten the sheer pleasure of just giving without any expectation of something in return. Even as something as simple as a smile or eye contact is a free gift – yet we expect something in return.

Consider this. If you are walking down the street and a stranger approaches you or maybe just smiles at you, what’s the first thought that enters your head?

If you’re like me it’s probably something like “What do they want?

If I turn that around, that’s precisely the same reaction I’d expect from you if I was the stranger walking towards you and smiling. I don’t like it but that thought is so deeply engrained it’s hard to remove.

Over the last couple of years I try an experiment from time to time. I make the small step of making eye contact as I go about my daily business. With shop assistants, people on the bus, walking down the street or in a café.

Try it yourself sometime.

It’s very revealing as it’s almost impossible to get eye contact with someone. Everyone goes about with their heads down and their hearts sleeping. I thought maybe it was just me. Perhaps I look a bit creepy (I don’t think so but I can never be sure) and it’s only me that people avoid. But it’s not. Everyone goes about their day to day stuff avoiding most kind of contact other the unavoidable.

And I still think it’s sad.

I don’t want my children to grow up that way.

A final thought.

After I die, will I be remembered more for what I took from the world or for what I gave to the world?

Silent journey

Last night I travelled back to Warsaw after a couple of days work in Wroclaw (Breslau) in the West of Poland. The journey was almost 6 hours on a train through the best parts of the evening in a warm, cozy compartment for 6 people. After a hectic couple of weeks I was grateful for the time to myself and settled down to catch up on a couple of films I’d been meaning to watch. One film was enough – ‘When the Levees Broke’ directed by Spike Lee, about Hurricane Katrina and the devastation of New Orleans. Not exactly four easy going hours, but I’d wanted to watch it and this was the perfect time. I broke the film half way and dozed and planned a couple of future blog articles.

This was a good time for me spent deep within myself, giving something to myself combined with a little creative thinking and stimulation from the film. I was ready to leave the train, though, by the time we reached the suburbs of Warsaw. It’s possible to have too much of a good thing!!

As we approached the end of the trip it suddenly occurred to me that I’d shared this trip with five other human beings. I had, of course, been aware that this compartment was full (space for 6 of us!) as we’d been tripping over each other. It wasn’t exactly cramped, but somewhat intimate.

The absolutely shocking thing was that I’d shared close to 6 hours of my life with five others and not a word or a glance had passed between any of us.

What was this all about?

I’d like to say that this was an exceptionally cold and unfriendly journey but the truth is I travel a lot and I know this is pretty commonplace and standard. I’ve spent half a day sitting on long-haul flights a few inches away from someone and neither of us signalled any recognition of each others’ presence. I realised that I’ve got to the point where I consider it perfectly normal to be in close proximity to other people and yet stay wrapped in my own world.

I do know a couple of people who will always start a conversation when they’re travelling but I think they’re the exception. On one or two occasions I’ve found myself sitting next to someone who started some contact. I’ve never done that myself. Never. I avoid eye contact. I travel in my own world of thoughts, half awake and half asleep and it seems to me that the majority do exactly the same thing.

I’m wondering what kind of world we’d live in if it was the other way round? How would it be if every time we passed a stranger, each and everyone of us was curious to learn more about that fellow human being? How would it be if we all raised our heads and looked into the eyes of our fellow travellers in life whenever we had the chance?

My guess is that we’d develop a much greater awareness of our shared humanity, less intolerance, hatred, misery, loneliness, ignorance and violence.

What can I do?

My personal experiment will be to see what happens when I next travel, raise my eyes to the person next to me, smile and greet them. After all, it could be you who’s sitting next to me!