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October 19, 2007
POPTech: Carl Honore on the Slow Movement
Carl Honore is taking the stage about the Speed of Human Culture. I'm a great fan of Carl, and I highly recommend his book, "In Praise of Slowness" which is taking the Fast World by storm.

He starts by talking about how people told him he’d love Maine because it’s so slow. I am noting that Carl is a very fast talker for a guy who espouses slowing down. He begins making his point about the perils of constantly being "plugged into" technology, by telling a a true story about a couple where the man realized things were very wrong when his fiance checked email on her Blackberry during lovemaking. (Did you know that 1 in 5 people surveyed stop sex and take the call when their cellphone rings?)
Carl describes speed walking, speed dating, and even speed yoga at a gym near his home, for time-starved professionals in this Road-Runner culture.
We are so caught up in the dash of daily life. We lose sight of the damage that it does to our health, work, relationships, to our environment. A wake up call is often in the shape of an illness. Or a relationship ending. Carl's wake up call was around bedtime stories with his young son, where he found himself speed-reading Snow White. His son often arguing about dad reading too fast. "Why are there only 3 dwarfs?," he would ask. He realized he had gone off the deep-end when he found that a book entitled “The One Minute Bedtime Story” had some appeal.
That was his moment of epiphany. He started looking, traveling, and finding people everywhere slowing down. However, rather than discover that things would fall apart when people slowed down, they found the opposite to be true - things got better. Hence the Slow-Movement.
Example - Food: The virus of hurry has infected everything in our food chain. How we grow it, how we make it, how we eat it. We lose the nutrition, the pleasure, the social connection of food. Slow Food actually started in Italy. Carl says that we get more pleasure health and meaning when we change our relationship with food.
The Slow City movement is also happening, reconfiguring the urban landscape. Park benches, roads closed to traffic. Both are Italian, but broader than just that.
Yoga, Tai Chi, is now prevalent. They foster not only physique, but an inner calm. Being “in the zone.” Time slows down. He talks about slow medicine: alternative therapies, acupuncture, massage. These things work.
And fast sex? Carl's not just referring to the tidal wave of porn on the net. He gives us a sad statistic - 20% of those surveyed are willing to interrupt lovemaking to take a cell-phone call. In the current culture of Men's Health magazine, he made reference to an article byline that read "Bring Her to Orgasm in 30 Seconds." How ridiculous, as though that's what any woman might want. On the other hand, there is a significant movement around slow lovemaking, including more awareness of Tantric lovemaking techniques. If it's good for Sting, why not the rest of us?
Children need slowness even more than adults do, as those more sublime experiences provide children opportunities fo develop and understand relationships. Some schools are telling parents that children need more down time - away from homework and scheduled activities. Even Harvard University sends out recommendations that their incoming freshmen encouraging them to find ways to slow down.
All this is fine for personal life, but what about the workplace?
In the 21st century, in many ways it's a given that companies and organizations have to be fast, but you can’t be fast ALL THE TIME. In the world of work, there are 3 strands of discussion that Carl makes about this:
1) Working less is happening in the Nordic countries. Yet they rank consistently high at the top of the corporate world. Example: Nokia
2) Working more slowly. The brain needs moments of slowness to drop into nuance and moments of creative thought. Sometimes you can't rush creativity.
3) Renegotiating our relationship with gadgets. Use the OFF button. According to an internal communication at HP, they've informed employees that the constant barrage of tech stimulation can drive IQ down about 10 points in a day. That's double the drop from smoking marijuana.
Wherever you look, we are finding that less is more. Slower can be better. In the early days of our speed culture, the pace of acceleration may have been good, but speed now is doing more harm than good. This message to rethink speed is spreading everywhere. It’s not extremist. It’s about relearning the lost art of shifting gears. Learn how to be fast AND to be slow.
Does it work in practice?
Yes. Carl cites his own life as an example. Yes, he still loves hockey and living in fast-paced London. But he is also making peace with his "inner tortoise." He has more energy. He finds himself more productive, and having more time to grapple with the big questions like, "Who am I? What am I doing here?" And his bedtime ritual with his son? It's far better, and he now reads to his son at his son's speed. Conversations happen that he didn’t have before.
One final personal Carl Honore story – after the book came out, his son came downstairs to give a homemade card to his daddy just as he was leaving for the airport on a trip to the U.S. It wasn't a farewell card, but one that thanked him for being the best story-reading dad in the world.
Posted by Mike at October 19, 2007 05:27 PM
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