There
are no short cuts
When people
run short of ideas, they reach out for other things.
There’s money, the first crutch of all fools.
For all
those who lack self esteem, the first argument is: If I had enough money, I
could have done it. This is untrue. Money can make nothing happen unless you
will it. And you can will nothing without a precise premise, a strategy or game
plan that you have clearly thought through. In short, an idea. Without the
idea, without the intellectual or emotional muscle that goes with that idea,
any idle dream based only on the availability of money is always doomed. That’s
why angel investors do due diligence. Not only of the idea to invest in but
also of the person who will deliver it. Does he or she have the grit, gumption,
dedication and leadership? Or the persistence to see the idea through its
initial days when all that can go wrong always does, following Murphy’s Law?
The other crutch, very popular in
India, is connections.
Most people think they can achieve anything if
only they had a godfather to see them through. The truth is, much as we may
like to believe the opposite, few success stories of modern India have anything
to do with godfathers. Except in politics and business, where it has been a
tradition to mentor heirs from within the family. So it’s tough to break in.
It’s far simpler to go out and make your own road. To do that, the first important
step is to stop looking for godfathers. Mentor yourself. The rich uncle will
always come to you once you have demonstrated your ability to deliver on your
own promise. But if you hang around him hoping he will give you the first
break, be sure that he will soon start avoiding you.
The third crutch is fate.
We believe
so much in it that we spend the best years of our life chasing those who
pretend they can predict it. Fortune telling is big business out here and
there’s a large contingent of charlatans who make their money telling us how we
must live our life, what coloured stones to wear, which God to pray to, and on
what days we ought to fast. The same person who is vegetarian five days a week
to appease a certain God is also ready to slaughter a hapless animal to please
another God on another occasion. We would rather go with what others tell us to
do than follow our own heart. We are not ready to think through our own
solutions. We need intermediaries to advise us on how to live, how to invest,
how to seduce luck. Curiously, the richer people become, the more they depend
on fake gurus and fraudulent fortune tellers.
The fourth crutch is new: Technology.
We have
suddenly found technology as a placebo for everything. Doctors have forgotten
how to diagnose. So everyone goes for every stupid test. Robotic surgery is
replacing human skill and ingenuity. You can’t make good movies. Go for 3D.
Dazzle everyone with SFX and sheer wizardry. Demand a 250 million dollar budget
when the greatest films in the world have been made for a pittance. (Pather
Panchali was made for 150,000 and Bicycle Thief, $133,000!) We have become so
stupid that we can’t even make imaginative porn. So Hugh Hefner now uses 3D to
make his centrespread girls look sexy whereas a fully clad Garbo once had the
whole world salivating every time she turned around and Mae West, at 83, could
get any young man into her pad with a single come hither line.
The purpose of technology, we often forget, is not to replace human ingenuity but to support it. We don’t need a computer to write like Shakespeare. We need to create new Shakespeares. The future lies in technology that can support our skills, not supplant them.
The purpose of technology, we often forget, is not to replace human ingenuity but to support it. We don’t need a computer to write like Shakespeare. We need to create new Shakespeares. The future lies in technology that can support our skills, not supplant them.
Pritish
Nandy BT121212
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