I was on vacation
in Nashville all of last week and it was wonderful; like no other vacation I've
taken before. I've been to Nashville at least a half dozen times in the past,
so the location wasn't really that big of a factor, but the thing that made it
great is a decision I made before we left. I decided I wasn't
going to be hurried for
the entire week.
Most
people who know me wouldn't consider me a hurried person, but I HATE being
delayed, and if I start to feel delayed, I can turn into a real
A-hole. The only person who really sees this is my wife, and it happens a lot
when we're traveling. I get annoyed if we leave later than I planned on
leaving, if we have to make bathroom stops (even though I'm usually the one
that needs them), if it takes more than two minutes to find a parking spot, and/or if there's traffic that gets in my way. When these things happen, I tend to get
really on edge and grumpy, and it's no fun for anyone. I'm much more prone to
being nasty to my wife and to others if I'm in this mood.
For this trip though, I decided to ignore what normally annoys me. Instead of making one big long trip, we only drove a little bit each day.We stopped in Kansas City for a day, then St. Louis for a day, then on to Nashville for several days, then to Kentucky for a day, then back to Kansas City for a day, then home. We took bathroom breaks whenever we (I) needed them. Parking and traffic in Nashville sucks, but I tried not to let it get to me (it still did a bit). There were several major cities we passed through with even worse traffic than Nashville but I tried to keep a cool head about it. While in Nashville we made an effort not to plan a lot for each day, instead focusing on one or two things we wanted to do and then just took our time doing those things. In the end, the efforts paid off. We got to spend quality time with several of our good friends and the vacation was fun, relaxing, and mostly tension free.
While
there are definitely more responsibilities and time frames I have to adhere too
in real life as compared to when I'm vacation, I want to carry this unhurried
mindset forward into day to day living. I want to make my days less "full" when possible, and not get on edge if circumstances leave me running five minutes behind. It feels a bit lazy and irresponsible
to say since "slowing down" is completely counter cultural and
not very "productive," but I think I need to do it regardless. If for no other reason than it makes me less of a jerk.
I
read a psychological study on being hurried a while back and it ultimately led me to make this decision. Give it a read and then ask yourself if slowing down might be a
good thing to consider for yourself...
Copied
and paraphrased from
A Good Samaritan
In their classic study, prominent social psychologists
Darley and Batson recruited 67 students from the Princeton Theological Seminary
and told them it was a study about religious education and vocations. They were
asked to fill in some personality questionnaires and told they were going to
give a brief talk in a nearby room. Some were asked to give a short talk about
the types of jobs that seminary graduates would be suited for, while the others
were asked to talk about the parable of the ‘Good Samaritan’.
Unknown to the study’s participants, they were to experience their very own
‘Good Samaritan’ test. After filling out their questionnaires and while making
their way to the other office to give their talk, they would encounter a man
lying in a doorway, doubled over, eyes closed and coughing. Participants would
have to pass the apparently highly distressed man, but would they stop to help?
The experimenters thought it would depend on how much participants were
hurried, so they manipulated this by giving them a map and one of the following
three instructions:
1. “Oh, you’re late. They were expecting you a few minutes ago. We’d better
get moving…”
2. “The assistant is ready for you, so please go right over.”
3. “…It’ll be a few minutes before they’re ready for you, but you might as
well head on over…”
This created three conditions: high, medium and low hurry. So some students
left the office thinking they needed to go quickly, others less so, while some
were relaxed. Each of these conditions was also split into two: half about to
deliver a talk on the Good Samaritan, the other half on job prospects for seminary
graduates. This meant that the experimenters could assess both the effect of
hurry as well as the talk they were giving on the students’ helping behaviours.
Would having a relevant parable uppermost in their minds nudge participants
into helping?
Here’s what happened. On average just 40% of the seminary students offered
help (with a few stepping over the apparently injured man) but crucially the
amount of hurry they were in had a large influence on behaviour. Here is the
percentage of participants who offered help by condition:
- Low hurry: 63%
- Medium hurry: 45%
- High hurry: 10%
The type of talk they were giving also had an effect on whether they offered
help. Of those asked to talk about careers for seminarians, just 29% offered
help, while of those asked to talk about the parable of the Good Samaritan,
fully 53% gave assistance.
What these figures show is the large effect that subtle aspects of the
situation have on the way people behave. Recall that the experimenters also
measured personality variables, specifically the ‘religiosity’ of the
seminarians. When the effect of personality was compared with
situation, i.e. how much of a hurry they happened to be in or whether they were
thinking about a relevant parable, the effect of religiosity was almost insignificant.
In this context, then, situation is easily trumping personality.
"Crossfire" by Stevie Ray Vaughan
Day by day, night after night
Blinded by the neon light
Hurry here, hustling there
No one's got the time to spare
Money's tight, nothing free
Won't somebody come and rescue me
Blinded by the neon light
Hurry here, hustling there
No one's got the time to spare
Money's tight, nothing free
Won't somebody come and rescue me
I am stranded, caught in the crossfire
Stranded, caught in the crossfire
Stranded, caught in the crossfire
Tooth for tooth, eye for an eye
Sell your soul just to bop on by
Beggin' for a dollar, stealin' a dime
Come on can't you see that I'm
Sell your soul just to bop on by
Beggin' for a dollar, stealin' a dime
Come on can't you see that I'm
Stranded, caught in the crossfire
I am stranded, caught in the crossfire
I am stranded, caught in the crossfire
I need some, kind of kindness
Some kind of sympathy, oh no
Some kind of sympathy, oh no
Save the strong, lose the weak
Never turning the other cheek
Trust nobody, don't be no fool
Whatever happened to the golden rule
Never turning the other cheek
Trust nobody, don't be no fool
Whatever happened to the golden rule
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