2017 was a year the world collectively stumbled. In my opinion. The stumble was probably a collective
over-tipping. A lot of things reached a
tipping point, and then toppled over. Crossing
the tipping point, in socioeconomic terms has always assumed to be a good
thing. Thanks for nothing, Malcom
Gladwell. Tipping over, if physics has
taught us anything, can be a frustrating phenomenon. Specially when the key is moderation. And Balance.
You don’t hear of shoes branded as New Tipping-Over. Tipping over also occurs in innovation and
gravitas, in movements and revolutions.
Rebellion when overdone, becomes whining. Opinions, when overstated become
trolling. Not every gap needs to be
filled. We aren’t motorcycle riders in
Hyderabad after all. Silence and moments
to absorb are essential. As Claude Debussy
(no clue, just googled his name) stated:
Music is the silence between the notes.
A constant cacophony like tinnitus ringing in your ears will eventually
get tuned out.
This leads to supposed “improvement” where things didn’t
need them. Moviepasses, higher
resolution on tinier screens (a perfect metaphor for the digital age ego),
Juicero, sleeping tents with legs etc.
The collective cyclic redundancy in shiny packaging was as if the world
itself was a simulation sponsored by Apple.
The point of it all being, treat things like you’re making a
smoothie. Know what to add, know when to
crank it up, but also know when to stop.
Not everything needs an over-saturated filter. Flavor over spice. Lucknowi Biryani over Hyderabadi Biryani. Seasoning over dousing. Stepping onto the treadmill is an important
step. But know when to get off, so you
can go through the day and come back to step on again. We need to remember not to let the things
driving a better life to become or overtake life itself. If we just took some time to step back and
take in the larger view, there are other things that deserve some attention
compared to the laser-like focus we tend to give a few particular things. In 2018, be like a little master, a little
Jack.
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