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It’s about time…African time

by Gerrit Cloete · Monday, June 22nd, 2009 at 4:13 pm

One of the major sporting events in Cape Town, South Africa (where I have the joy of living!) is the annual Cape Argus/Pick n Pay cycle tour that snakes for 109km around the Cape Peninsula.

35 000 cyclists descend on Cape Town for this famous spectacle.

One of the most often heard questions after the race is:”What was your time?”

Pages and pages of names and finish times are published a few days after the event, and people make promises to finish in a shorter time next year.

This is a rather linear way of looking at what this great event can bring.

How about asking questions like:

“Who did you meet along the way?”

“Did you also get the baboons at the turn off to Cape Point?”

“DId you pull off for that great massage at Tokai?”

It begs a response that is very different from the linear “so many hours and minutes” reply.

It begs a response about the experience of the experience…

The ancient Greeks, as I understand it, had three concepts/words for time:

* chronos: linear, measured, “clock” time.  1 hour + 1 hour = 2 hours.

* kairos: experiential time

* eon (aeon): An immeasurable or infinite space of time; eternity; a long space of time; an age (from www.dictionary.com)

From Wikipedia:

“While [chronos] refers to chronological or sequential time, [kairos] signifies a time in between, a moment of undetermined period of time in which something special happens. What the special something is depends on who is using the word. While chronos is quantitative, kairos has a qualitative nature.”

I like this example: A golfer hits a hole-in-one. Or you bungy from the highest bridge in Africa.

* Chronos: How long did it take?  Less than a minute.

* Kairos: How did you experience it? How does it feel?  Great!  Fantastic! Unbelievable! Heehaaaa!

* Eon: How long will you remember this for?  For the rest of my life.

An important question arises: Do we (should we) not do things and live life for long term impact rather than instant gratification and short term gain (often at the expense of generations to come)?

If so, then let’s think where the long term impact (e.g. “I will remember it forever”) comes from  - from how long it took, or from what you did and experienced?

The answer is obvious: eon comes from kairos, not chronos.  It comes from what you do and experience and not how long it takes.

Yet we tend to focus so much on speeding things up rather than slowing things down.

The “fast productivity” question is: “How long will the meeting take?”.

The “slow productivity” question is” “Should we even have this meeting?”

So many people complain about attending unproductive meetings, yet they do not question the meeting.

Rather than keep on rushing from one meeting to the next, just stop the meeting madness for a moment and ask the Slow Productivity questions: “Why are we meeting?”, “What is the desired outcome?”, “What do you want me to come and to at your meeting?”.

If there are no clear and meaningful answers to these questions - don’t go!

In Africa we have the concept of “African time”.

From Wikipedia: “Africa time” or African time is a colloquial term used to describe a perceived cultural tendency, in some parts of Africa, toward a more relaxed attitude to time. This is sometimes used in a negative sense, about tardiness in appointments, meetings and events. The term is also sometimes used to describe the more leisurely, relaxed and less rigorously scheduled lifestyle found in these countries, especially as opposed to the more hectic, clock-bound pace of daily life in Western countries.  In October 2007, an Ivorian campaign against African time, [had] the slogan… “‘African time’ is killing Africa - let’s fight it.”

But is it?  Or is the clock from the West killing the real spirit of Africa?

Maybe Slow Productivity can embrace practical ways of exploring African time and Slow Time for paradoxically improving productivity?

“Ex Africa semper aliquid novi” - Out of Africa there is always something new.

Maybe the time for African Time is here if we want to have more sanity and improved quality of life and less rush; enjoy more of kairos and be less enslaved to chronos?

Only time will tell. :)

One Response to “It’s about time…African time”

viretlj

Gerrit, I wrote this slowly because I know you’ve started reading slowly. And guess what? Far fewer typos and in less time, not to mention frustration reduction, the safeguarding of my keyboard and huge savings in Panodols…..now thats all got to count in favour of SLOW.
Having done about 13 or 16 Tours de Argus myself I found your article quite fascinating. In addition, being a S L O W cyclist in my day, I can truthfuly say that I cycled the tour purely for the fun of the event, the opportunity to help others and to kick some baboons a$$ at Smitswinkel Bay or simply trying to outscream them up Chappies (back in the days before the De-Tour), and when I went through my records to see what my quickest time was, I found it to be 3h55 minutes..strange that I couldn’t recall it off-hand given the obsession of every man and his dog to break the sub-3 hour mark - if I got halfway by then I would already have had twice the fun. So in short, I have many fond memories of our good old Argie Tour and should really get back on the old rust bucket and rack up a few hundred K’s in preparation for one in the coming years. Now for part 2 of my story…I worked in Africa for all but the last 4 years of my working life….I used to get extremely frustrated at the concept of African time, even to the point of locking boadroom doors to keep the late-comers out and imposed all sorts of penalties..your round at the bar on Friday…you bring lunch next week…for all of us…that sort of thing….Of course with age comes wrinkles and one of my wrinkles has been the ability to become outspoken to the point that I can easily ask the awkward questions, quickly change the direction of discussion and radically curtail time-wasting…especially when it’s MY time being wasted…..I’m thinking SLOW has got to be the new FAST… :D

take care mate

Cheers

Leon Viret

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