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It’s been two years since this blog was conceived.

African elephants have a gestation period of 640 days (so the learned Google tells me), so you are witnessing the birth of a young African elephant with this post!

I invite you to participate in conversations about SLOW Productivity and SLOW living in general.  Check out the SLOW Movement  and also the blog of Carl Honore (father of the SLOW Movement).

To quote Carl: “[Slow living] 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.”

The  “SLOW Productivity” oxymoron is intentional.

During a recent radio talk show where I was the guest, there were clear divisions. One guy said thet the SLOW philosophy is an excuse not to work and that people subscribing to it are not the kind of people that make the world go round.  He’d better read up about the succes that IBM, Kone and Ipswitch to name but a few have had with this approach!

Others can’t stop talking about the benefits that living life at a slower pace has brought them.

As with everything, it begins in the mind… “As you think, so you will get.”

I would love to receive your contribution to my book “SLOW Productivity: The Art and Science of Slowing Down to Speed Up”.  I look forward to your mail.

Enjoy this journey with me!

Festina lente… “Make haste slowly”…”Haas jou langsaam”…”Uhambo lulawulwa yindlela”.

On Friday morning at about 08:20 I sent out an e-mail to my list of subscribers asking them to reply to my message if they would be interested in getting more information, or even attending a workshop, on the topic of “Slow Productivity”.

846 people opened the message and up to now, 162 of them let me know that they are interested in this topic. And just as a matter of interest, 101 of these came in within an hour of sending out my request.  Don’t you just love speed when it is appropriate? :)

To me this is a clear indication that there is a need to balance the increasing speed of life appropriately with “slow”.

I have received some contradictory comments (and it’s so nice to get them!) about the “Slow Productivity” title for a  workshop.

Opinions ranged from  “BAD NAME – people don’t want slow productivity!” on the one hand to stopping someone in his tracks from doing what he was about to rush off to because of the inherent contradiction of the subject line.

I also got very good comments about the difficulty of selling this concept to the corporate world, especially the “fast laners” who could probably benefit from this approcah the most.  If you have any ideas, I am all ears!

I have spent the weekend in relaxing mode in Knysna, where I am reflecting on the publication of a book and other information products along the lines of Slow Productivity.  If you have thoughts or contributions or stories you can share for inclusion in the book, I would love to hear them!  Just pop them over to me by email.

Watch this space…it’s going to be a lot of fun!

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. :)

Welcome!

Welcome to the Slow Productivity blog!

I am having loads of fun integrating new things I discover every day about a slower approach to life in general and work specifically. Carl Honore’s book “In Praise of Slow” was a great place to start…

This is the space where I will share new thoughts, insights and musings.

I invite you to be part of this journey and share your own experiences and thoughts.

Have fun!

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