What is In Praise of
Slow about?
It’s about how the world
got stuck in fast-forward and how more and more people everywhere are slowing
down. In other words, it’s about the rise of the Slow Movement. In Praise of
Slow is published in 30 languages and has been a bestseller in many countries.
In October 2009, it was the inaugural selection for the new Huffington Post
book club.
What is the Slow
Movement?
It is a cultural
revolution against the notion that faster is always better. The Slow philosophy
is not about doing everything at a snail’s pace. It’s about seeking to do
everything at the right speed. Savoring the hours and minutes rather than just
counting them. Doing everything as well as possible, instead of as fast as
possible. It’s about quality over quantity in everything from work to food to parenting.
When was this Slow idea
born?
People have been
defending the value of slowness for at least 200 years – think of the
Romantics, or the Transcendentalists or even the hippies. But the idea of a
Slow Movement which seeks to blend fast and slow to help people work, live and
play better in the modern world is more recent. Born in Italy in the early
1990s the ****Slow Food movement helped recapture the word slow’ as something
positive. But they concentrate on food. More recently Slow has become a
universal label to explain the benefits of doing everything at the right speed:
sex, work, education, exercise, etc.
Why do we need a Slow
Movement now?
It seems to me that we
are moving towards an historical turning point. For at least 150 years
everything has been getting faster and for the most part speed was doing us
more good than harm in that time. But in recent years we’ve entered the phase
of diminishing returns. Today we are addicted to speed, to cramming more and
more into every minute. Every moment of the day feels like a race against the
clock, a dash to a finish line that we never seem to reach. This roadrunner
culture is taking a toll on everything from our health, diet and work to our
communities, relationships and the environment. That is why the Slow Movement
is taking off.
Have we reached the
point of trying to accelerate the unacceleratable?
Definitely. You can even
do courses in Speed Yoga or Speed Meditation these days. All this technology
connects us in ways that can be wonderful but it also tempts us into trying to
hurry up relationships too. So on Facebook or MySpace you find people claiming
to have 4,356 friends! The very idea of friendship is devalued. And maybe we’re
also losing the ability to make friends: in Britain, a major survey found that
between 1986 and 2006 the number of teenagers who say they have no best friend
in whom to confide rose from under one in eight to nearly one in five. Or
consider the phenomenon of Speed Dating, where singles gather at events where
they get three minutes (sometimes less) each with 30 members of the opposite
sex and have to choose who might be a suitable romantic partner. Actually, I
read recently that in the latest version of Speed Dating the participants no
longer even meet face to face (that’s too slow, you see). Instead, they get three
minutes to appraise each other via email or instant messaging. A magazine in
Britain even published an article recently on how to bring about an orgasm in
30 seconds! So even in the bedroom it’s On your marks, get set, go! Our
speedaholism is out of control, and we all know it.
What are the tell-tale
symptoms of living too fast?
When you feel tired all
the time and like you’re just going through the motions, getting through the
many things on your To-Do list but not engaging with them deeply or enjoying
them very much. You don’t remember things as vividly when you rush through
them. You feel like you’re racing through your life instead of actually living
it. Illnesses are often the body’s way of saying Enough already, slow down!
What inspired you to write
In Praise of Slow?
My life had become an
endless race against the clock. I was always in a hurry, scrambling to save a
minute here, a few seconds there. My wake-up call came when I found myself
toying with the idea of buying a collection of One-Minute Bedtime Stories Snow
White in 60 seconds. Suddenly it hit me: my rushaholism has got so out of hand
that I’m even willing to speed up those precious moments with my children at
the end of the day. There has to be a better way, I thought, because living in
fast forward is not really living at all. That’s why I began investigating the
possibility of slowing down.
How has the Slow
Movement grown since In Praise of Slow was published?
In leaps and bounds.
Everywhere people are waking up to the folly of living in fast-forward and
discovering that by slowing down judiciously they do everything better and
enjoy everything more. When I first began researching my book, the search term
slow movement turned up almost nothing. There was Slow Food but that was it. Today
you get nearly 500,000 entries on Google under slow movement. And it’s not just
yoga teachers and aromatherapists flying the flag of Slow; it’s business too.
The corporate world is starting to realize that too much speed and hurry hurts
the bottom line. A senior manager at IBM has even launched a slow email
movement, urging people to unplug and make the most of email (and life) by
using email less. And that’s IBM, not a meditation school. Many companies are
waking up to the fact that staff are more productive and creative when they can
shift down a gear or two during the workday that’s why you see a boom in
chill-out rooms, on-site yoga and massage, and even napping pods in the
workplace. The latest neuroscience shows that when people are in a relaxed, mellow
state, the brain slips into a deeper, richer, more nuanced mode of thought.
Psychologists actually call this Slow Thinking. Artists have always known that
you cannot hurry the act of creation and increasingly businesses are realizing
the same thing: that workers need moments to relax, unplug, be silent in order
to be creative and productive.
Productivity is one
thing, but what about pleasure?
Pleasure is certainly a
big gain from slowing down. Mae West once said that “Anything worth doing is
worth doing slowly” and though she was probably talking about sex (did she ever
talk about anything else?) it’s an observation that holds true across the board.
We are obsessed with the destination and have lost the art of enjoying the
journey. Everything has to be instant so we miss out on the joy of
anticipation, of looking forward to things. We lose the pleasure of striving to
make something happen. I think that anticipation is a key ingredient in
pleasure of any kind. When we look forward to something, imagining how it will
be, planning how to enjoy it, getting a little nervous maybe – when the thing
actually happens the pleasure is more intense.
Does that mean the Slow
Movement is anti-speed?
No, absolutely not. I
love speed. I like my Internet connection to be fast and I play two of the
fastest sports around, ice-hockey and squash, in my spare time. I live in
London, which is a city of volcanic energy, and I enjoy working to deadlines.
Speed has its place in the modern world. Often you have to move quickly,
particularly at work. The problem is that speed has become a way of life. We do
everything in a rush. We are stuck in fast forward and that is unhealthy.
What is the Slow take on
multitasking?
That it’s usually a poor
use of time. The latest neuro-scientific research suggests what most of us
already suspect: that the human brain is not very good at multitasking. Sure
there are a few simple or routine tasks we can perform at the same time, but as
soon as you have to engage the brain, you really need to focus on one activity
at a time. Much of what passes for multitasking is nothing of the sort: it is
sequential toggling between activities. And the research suggests that this
flitting back and forth is actually very unproductive: tasks can take more than
twice as long to complete when performed in this way.
That’s why that history
essay takes your teenage daughter (with her IMs, cellphone, MySpace page, TV
monitor, etc) three hours to write instead of 90 minutes. Hewlett Packard
recently warned that the constant barrage of electronic interruptions causes IQ
levels in the workplace to fall 10 points double the effect of smoking
marijuana. In other words, being always on does not turn you into an
uber-productive master of the universe; it turns you into Cheech and Chong or
Ozzy Osbourne.
Changing attitudes is hard because our culture is marinated in
the notion that doing more things at once is somehow deeply modern, efficient
and fulfilling. But change is possible. Once people understand the limits of
the human brain, it should become easier to kick the multitasking habit. Some
companies are starting to encourage staff to focus on one activity at a time and
wall themselves off from the barrage of electronic interruptions whenever
possible. This will take time because most of us are adrenaline-junkies. We
need to wean ourselves off multitasking slowly.
That means starting with maybe
an hour a day focusing on a challenging intellectual task with the gadgets
switched off. Or setting aside an afternoon when you perform every task in
sequence rather than in overlapping fashion and then seeing how much more
quickly and accurately you get your work done. I multi-task a lot less now and
find that I am a lot more creative and efficient and I enjoy my life more
because I’m more deeply engaged with everything I do.
How do Oriental
disciplines like Chi Kung, yoga and meditation fit into the Slow revolution?
They are completely in
harmony with it. They teach us how to be comfortable with slowness. They
retrain our bodies and minds and help shift us into a lower gear. This brings
obvious physical benefits such as greater flexibility, strength and balance.
But it also goes deeper than that. It can cultivate an inner calm that you take
with you into the more hectic moments of the day – so that you keep your head
while all around you are losing theirs. By slowing us down, these Oriental
practices also give more depth and meaning to our lives. One of the key
benefits of decelerating is that it gives us the time and tranquility to look
inside ourselves, to listen to our hearts, to get in touch with our souls, to
ask the big questions in life.
Which parts of the Slow
revolution do you find most fascinating?
That is a hard question
because I find them all fascinating! The Slow philosophy is making inroads into
every walk of life. There are movements for Slow Homes, Slow Management, Slow
Leadership, Slow Libraries, Slow Research, Slow Sex, you name it. Lately I have
been paying a lot of attention to the rise of Slow Travel. The fast approach to
travel and tourism is taking a heavy toll. The environmental damage caused by
our penchant for air travel is well documented, but it is just the start. When
we travel in roadrunner mode, we miss the small details that make each place
thrilling and unique. We lose the joy of the journey. And at the end of it all,
when every box on our To Do list has been checked, we return home even more
exhausted than when we left. That is why Slow Travel is gaining ground.
Slow Travel is about
savouring the journey (traveling by train or barge or bicycle or foot rather
than crammed into an airplane); taking time to engage and learn about the local
culture; finding moments to switch off and relax; showing an interest in the
effect our visit has on the locals and on the environment. Obviously we don’t
live in an ideal world so sometimes we have to travel faster than we want or
should. But at least we should seek wherever possible to take a Slow approach
to travel. It will deliver more pleasure, stronger memories and more
sustainability.
I am also very
interested in the idea of Slow Design making products in a sustainable way,
with high-calibre materials and real craftsmanship. The consumer culture has
been producing cheap, disposable crap for so long. I think the next stage for
capitalism will be for us to consume fewer things of higher quality.
As a globetrotting
writer and commentator, do you manage to stay Slow?
Yes, I do. It’s not
easy, and it takes lots of discipline, but it is possible. One can be Slow in
any profession (though some are clearly harder than others) because being Slow
is essentially a state of mind. My life is still busy but not TOO busy. I have
definitely changed – there is for me a very clear Before and After. Before I
was always trying to do more and more things in less and less time. It was all
about speed and quantity. Now I approach each thing seeking to do it as well as
possible instead of as fast as possible. This has made a big change in the way
I feel about time: I no longer feel a slave to it. I feel like I have enough
time for things and I don’t very often feel rushed (even though I have an
exciting, full life).
This is not a paradox. It’s about finding the right
equilibrium and not being obsessively neurotic about time. My first step was
realizing that I had got stuck in fast-forward, and that too much speed was
doing me damage. Then I began making concrete changes. I cut back on the things
I was trying to cram into my schedule to allow more time to rest and to devote
to the things that are more important to me. So I dropped one sport (tennis)
and reduced my TV-watching to a few hours a week, instead of a few hours a day.
I also stopped wearing a watch, which seemed to make me less neurotic about
time. I take breaks during the work day to relax, eat and do a bit of
meditation.
And I switch off my technology (email, cellphone, etc) whenever
possible, instead of being always connected. I have learned to say “No” to
things – work, social offers, etc – to avoid getting over-scheduled. This is
especially important in my work. I get lots and lots of offers to write, speak,
consult and it is tempting to do them all, but if I did I would become the
opposite of what I’m preaching. So I choose the jobs that I think are the most
important in order to keep a balance in my life.
How do other people
react when someone slows down?
No man is an island and
when we start slowing down we have to take account of the impact on people
around us. That involves warning friends and colleagues, explaining why your
are going to do less, unplug your technology more, and ask for more time for
work assignments. I was afraid at first that this was going to alienate people,
and initially some were skeptical. But very soon people began to understand
that they could no longer reach me 24 hours a day; that I wasn’t going to say
Yes to every social and work offer; that I might like a bit more time for a
job. What I found is that people around me, after a time of watching me slow
down, began to implement similar changes in their own lives.
How do the principles of
Slow apply to children and how do you raise your own kids?
I think children need
slowness even more than adults do. It’s in those moments of quiet, of
unstructured time, of boredom even, that kids learn how to look into
themselves, how to think and be creative, how to socialize. We are doing a
great disservice to our children by pushing them so hard to learn things
earlier and earlier and by keeping them so busy. They need time and space to
slow down, to play, to be children. Across the world, parents, politicians,
adults in general are so anxious about children nowadays that we have become
too interventionist and too impatient; we don’t allow them enough freedom.
My
wife and I give our children lots of time to play on their own. We resist the
temptation to enroll them in too many extracurricular activities. We limit the
time they spend sitting in front of computer screens and using technology, so
that they run around outdoors and invent their own play. We also don’t try to
push them to learn academic things before they are ready. And so far the
results have been good. I hope it continues!
Can everyone benefit
from the Slow revolution?
Yes, slowing down is not
just a luxury for the rich. It is, in essence, a mindset. Most of the things
that make up a Slow life are available to most people. People on lower incomes
can cook simple meals at home and eat them at the table with the TV switched
off; they can choose to use their technology in a more balanced way; they can
resist the temptation to speed-read bedtime stories to their children; they can
avoid over-packing their social schedules by saying No to some things; they
don’t have to over-schedule their children with activities; they don’t have too
drive fast; and so on.
But doesn’t slowing down
have to mean working less and therefore earning less money?
Not necessarily. I
probably work the same number of hour as before; I just work them more slowly.
And unless you are living in abject poverty, working/earning less is maybe
easier than we think. I was at Malpensa airport in Milan the other day and the
man sweeping the floors was talking constantly for at least an hour – on his
mobile phone. That costs money. It seems that even for people on lower incomes
there can be ways to cut back on consumption and spending. That said, however,
I accept that there are some people for example single mothers juggling two
jobs – who will find it hard to cut back. But that does not mean the Slow
movement is elitist. Every social revolution starts in the middle classes,
after all, and then spreads throughout the rest of society.
Does the Slow Movement
appeal to some social groups more than to others?
I’m always amazed and
delighted by the way the Slow philosophy resonates right across the social
spectrum. The virus of hurry has infected every corner of our culture and we
are all desperate for a cure. I think the way In Praise of Slow has filtered
into the most unusual places speaks volumes. It has been translated into 30
languages and been a bestseller all over the place, from North America to
Britain, Spain, Italy and Holland to Argentina, Paraguay, Sweden and Taiwan. I
know of many clergy (Protestant, Muslim and Catholic) who have quoted from the
book in their sermons around the world.
It is touted by yoga teachers, Tantric
sex instructors and practitioners of alternative medicine. It was chosen as a
book of the year by a number of business magazines and is now on reading lists
given out by management consultants, life coaches and other business gurus. It
was even placed inside the Big Brother (TV) house in Argentina to give the
contestants something more to talk about than cellulite and Britney Spears. I
hear from many schools around the world where children aged have been doing
projects based on the book. I also hear from book clubs that have read In
Praise of Slow.
What is the future of
the Slow Movement?
The good news is that
the Slow movement is growing.fast! And as the world gets faster, the need for a
counter-current of slowness will grow too. I feel more optimistic now than I
did when In Praise of Slow first came out.
Is there a danger that
the Slow Movement will get hijacked by the speed culture and become just
another consumer fad?
There is a danger of
that, clearly. But I think that the Slow Movement is strong enough now to
resist that threat. And besides we need to slow down so badly that it is hard
to imagine that people will suddenly give up on deceleration and move on to the
next trend.
Many companies are using
the idea of Slow to sell the their products now does that worry you?
I have mixed feelings
about this. On one hand, there is a danger that the Slow message will get
diluted by companies using the term Slow for products that are not Slow at all.
But I can’t see how we can stop this. The more optimistic view is that any ad
that trumpets the values of Slow is a good thing. Buying and selling things is
a part of the human experience and we live in a world where advertising is part
of the cultural wallpaper. Most ads pump out a single message: There isn’t
enough time to slow down, so hurry up and buy our product!
The fact that so
many ads now use a Slow aesthetic or message (think people sitting on beaches
or doing yoga in the forest) shows how much the world is yearning for slowness.
It also seems to me that every time a company runs an ad campaign based on the
idea that slow equals pleasure and quality, the cultural tectonic plates shift
a little further below the surface. It makes slowing down more appealing and
permissible. Here are three recent examples Slow-inspired ad campaigns: Haagen
Dazs discovered that it took 12 minutes from leaving the freezer for its ice
cream to reach the perfect point of softness for eating. The company recently
ran a campaign in Britain based on the joy of waiting for that perfect moment
of ice cream pleasure. The ad campaign that launched the new Volkswagen Beetle
in Japan used “Go Slow” (in English) as its slogan. Audi’s latest model is
advertised as The slowest car we’ve ever built.
But what do you say to
people who claim that the world will inevitably go on speeding up and that a
Slow revolution is pie in the sky?
I say look at the
history books. Take the rise of feminism. In the 60s, when feminists said the
world was unjust and the moment for change had come, the mainstream reaction
was: No, the world has always been this way. You can’t change it. Go back to
the kitchen! But look at the world today. Obviously there is a long way to go
to create a world of perfect gender equality, but a woman today could hardly
imagine how severely life was limited for her grandmother.
I look at my sister
and my grandmother and marvel at the change in just two generations. And the
green movement has followed a similar arc: it was dismissed as a plaything for
hippies and tree-huggers thirty years ago but today is near the top of the
political agenda. The message is that the world can change, if we want it to.
For a cultural revolution to occur, you need three factors: the need for
change; an awareness of the need for change; and people willing to put that
change into practice. We now have all three factors in place for the Slow
revolution to push on. I think the Slow movement is at the same point as
feminism or green-ism was 30 or 40 years ago. We won’t change the world, or
make it Slow, by next year. It will take time. The Slow revolution will be
slowBut I believe it will happen.
What will a Slow world
look like?
It will be a world that
is healthy, happy and humane. But you have to realistic. I am no utopian. I am
a skeptic by nature. I don’t believe we will ever create a world where everyone
does everything at the right speed and no one ever feels rushed. That’s just a
fantasy. The world is too complex and interconnected for that. It’s impossible
in a world where we have to interact with others. Impatience is also part of
being human. I suspect even the Dalai Lama rushes unnecessarily sometimes!
Hell, even I forget to slow down from time to time I face a barrage of requests
to give speeches, do interviews, etc from all over the world every day and it’s
hard not to get caught up in the frenzy. But at least our starting point should
be to seek the tempo giusto and to expect others to do so too.
What do you hope readers
will take away from In Praise of Slow?
I
hope that they will pause and reflect on how they lead their lives and how
their lives affect the people and the world around them. I guess what I really
want is for readers to grasp the very counter-cultural idea that the best way
to survive and thrive in the fast-paced modern world is not to speed up but to
slow down. And it seems to be working. Every day I open up my inbox and find a
few emails from readers around the world who say the book has changed their
lives. It’s exciting, and humbling.
Source:carlhonore.com
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