Monday, 20 May 2013

Manipur Bir Tikendrajit House in total disarray

NEW DELHI, May 19 : A rudderless ship, that is what Manipur Bir Tikendraji House at Chanakyapuri, South Delhi has been reduced to with the staff running around trying to keep the House in order. When The Sangai Express visited the State house, there .....

Incentives for Everesters

IMPHAL, May 19: The State Government will consider incentives that may be given to the five Manipuri mountaineers who have successfully scaled the world’s highest peak Mt Everest, informed the Chief Minister while talking with The Sangai Express. The.....

Governor, CM, Dy CM congratulate So far, six from State have scaled Everest

IMPHAL, May 19: Governor Gurbachan Jagat, Chief Minister O Ibobi and Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam have congratulated the team of the 1st North East Mt Everest Expedition 2013 on summiting the highest peak of the world. Gurbachan Jagat said that the.....

Cleanliness drive at Ima Keithel

IMPHAL, May 18: With an objective to keep Ima Keithel neat and clean, Blooming Manipur, Kangla (Facebook Group), Manipur Times, Manipur Photography Club, European Manipuri Asso-ciation (EMA) and Manipur Cycle Club jointly organised a cleanliness drive at .....

KNF celebrates raising day

IMPHAL, May 19: The Kuki National Front (KNF) celebrated its 26th raising day at Camp Ebenezer, Sadar Hills yesterday with more than 200 cadres and leaders. The raising day celebration started with a mass fasting prayer. Addressing the gathering KNF p.....

AIDS Candle Light Memorial Day Observed Solemnly NGOs urge for amended AIDS policy

IMPHAL, May 19 : While observing the International AIDS Candle Light Memorial Day at JN Dance Academy today, 16 NGOs have urged the authorities to implement an amended Manipur State AIDS policy within three months. Generally, International AIDS Candle.....

Rongali Bihu

IMPHAL, May 19:The Asom Samaj Manipur hosted Rongali Bihu celebration at Devalaya Mandir, Kalibari (Thangal bazar) today with Education Minister M Okendro Singh gracing the celebration as the chief guest. While Okendro conveyed warm wishes to the Assam.....

To check frauds and money swindling Economic offence wing set up

IMPHAL, May 19: With the primary objective of checking the practice of swindling money from the public by non-banking financial companies (NBFC), an Economic Offence Wing has been set up in Manipur Police Department. The Economic Offence Wing was set .....

Guardians' body takes up street vendors' cause

IMPHAL, May 19: Noting that upper floors of the three market complexes at Khwairamband keithel are yet to be occupied, All Manipur Students' Guardians' Organisation has proposed that the Government of Manipur provide trading slots to women street vendors .....

DU admissions

IMPHAL, May 18 : Delhi University has announced the dates for undergraduate admissions for the academic session 2013-2014. It will commence on June 5 and continue till June 19, said a press release issued by Naga Students’ Union, Delhi. Unlike las.....

Ex-rebels are not untouchables : Dy CM

IMPHAL, May 19: Stating that the State Government has initiated several measures to bring insurgents on the path of peace, Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam has called upon all the people not to view or treat former rebels who have laid down arms and retu.....

UG cadres surrender

IMPHAL, May 19: Security forces of Red Shield Division recovered a huge cache of arms and ammunition buried under ground in 2007 by a cadre of UPPK at the foothills of Thangjing ridge, said a PIB (DW) release that identified the UG cadre as SS Capt Moiran.....

ZU concerned

IMPHAL, May 19:Zeliangrong Union (Assam, Manipur, Nagaland) has expressed concern over the death of an NSCN (IM) cadre in a reported gunfight with ZUF cadres yesterday. In a press release, ZU (AMN) said that it has always been working for maintaining p.....

Tousem body

IMPHAL, May 19:Development Committee Tousem Block 52-Tamei AC has drawn the attention of Chief Minister O Ibobi regarding bad road conditions of the Sub-Division. In a press release, the committee said that the Chief Minister had promised during his vi.....

Hurt in mishap

IMPHAL, May 19:Three youngsters, who were riding a brand new Yamaha FZ motorcycle, met with an accident in front of Mantripukhri headquarters of 69 Bn CRPF this evening. According to an informed source, the biker trio hit the road median and rolled sev.....

MLA inspects

IMPHAL, May 19:Ahead of the monsoon season, Yaiskul AC MLA E Chand today conducted a field inspection of the vulnerable sections of Imphal river bank within Yaiskul Assembly segment together with IFC officials. Observing that many excavations dug up fo.....

Hate the person who breaks traffic rules

If you think no one is watching then you are mistaken! But unfortunately, I am not a traffic cop who will jump in front and enforce you fine for breaking the traffic rule. It is the general Indian nature of carelessness and interpretation of pampered free.....

Traditional healing methods with special reference to Manipur

By Dr K Paochunbou Every ethnic community in Manipur has well-established knowledge, skills, beliefs and practices relating to promotion of positive health and avoidance of sickness even before the hospital oriented system of medicine. In an old civiliza.....

Mis-selling Insurance

By Dipankar Jakharia Not a single week goes by when I am not asked by my readers about an ULIP policy they have invested and now feels as if they have been ripped-off by it. I have written many a times before and ready to write many a time in future abou.....

World Migratory Bird Day 2013

Large scale climatic changes, as have been experienced in the past, are expected to have an effect on the timing of migration. Studies have shown a variety of effects including timing changes in migration, breeding as well as population variations due to .....

My Turn

By : Ranjan Yumnam

The Etiquette of Rudeness

The world can be neatly divided into two types of people—the rude and the polite. Polite people are warm and friendly and they seem agreeable in deportment and speech even when they hold views divergent from ours and do things that we may not approve of. Not all polite people are necessarily good guys though. Some of them could have poison in their hearts, but in spite of it, they are people we feel comfortable being around with because of their amiable personality. Call it shrewdness, good nature or diplomacy; politeness in people is an alluring quality. As Adam (Brendan Fraser) says in the movie Blast From the Past, a polite gentleman or a lady is “someone who always attempts to make the people around him or her feel as comfortable as possible.”That’s about it. Polite people are like you and me (Let’s suppose. Come on, it’s Sunday!). 

Now, with your permission, allow me to kick up the topic of rude people who are at the other end of the manners spectrum. Rude fellows are obnoxious types who are not cordial and pleasant, and in whose presence, your toes might actually twirl inside the shoes wanting to run away from the place immediately. 

In most situations, though a simple ‘sorry’ or a firm smile-coated ‘no’ would suffice, uncivil people instead resort to the aggressive gesture of raising the voice, widening the eyes, mouthing expletives and mocking at others’ supposed weaknesses without even a slight attempt to conceal their contempt for the other people. 

So, why is it that some people are rude the way they are? One factor could be the way they are brought up, the kind of culture that is rooted in their family and exposure to their parents’ behaviours. People who are born with silver spoon in their mouth carry with them a false sense of entitlement even beyond the boundaries of their house. Pampered and habituated to having their ways, they look at the world from the blinkered lens of their indulgent parents’ eyes. This kind of acquired rudeness is most predominant among the kids of the affluent and the powerful cutting across all professional backgrounds. Easy access to money, guns, machines, gadgets, foreign travel, cars, sycophants—you name it— all these go to hammer into the minds of these youngsters a feeling of superiority of their being destined to a life of privilege. They are a bully to their friends, work colleagues and underlings and are more resented then loved. 

Another factor that shapes a person’s conduct is the culture of the society in which she/he lives. The graceless Indians who push, jostle and trample upon each other for grabbing a seat in the public bus, unmindful of the elderly and women, will never be as polite and dignified as the rudest Scandinavians. The idea of standing in queue for turns to be served at public places is a novelty until recently in this part of the continent. Basic courtesies such as saying thank you, sorry, excuse me, etc. tend to be used only sparingly in daily encounters with strangers, friends and colleagues. The first words that Indians are likely to learn from foreigners are the choicest abuses and below the belt jibes in the alien language. The Indian males are famous for touching their private parts in full view of the public, as if they will explode if not attended to immediately. They also pee against any structural erection (like wall, tree, vehicle, electric pole…list goes on) and have raised this unsightly habit to an art form in the manner of expressing a style statement. Our language is replete with expletives mostly alluding to and derogatory of the female anatomy. Our women enforce bandhs by hanging used phaneks which reeks of revenge for centuries of male contempt for them. I just hope this practice doesn’t degenerate into one of hanging sanitary napkins! 

Some people are rude because they are smart, and are too impatient to tolerate the imperfections of other people. Our Exhibit A would be Steve Jobs, the iconic creator of iPhone and other game changing products. He was great, but not a nice man to work with—his many obituaries in the newspapers have portrayed him as a tough taskmaster with a fierce temper, even to the extent of calling him a jerk. This grey side of his personality is downplayed because he was a genius and the cool products that he created dwarfed his personal flaws. If you believe in the Mad Man Theory of Genius, Steve Jobs was entitled to be brash and abrasive in his dealings with other men of lesser caliber. His achievements are considered to be significant as that of Thomas Edison, and a little liberty he took while dealing with his employees can easily be ignored. The point is, if you are a smart genius like Steve Jobs was, you can afford to be rude, and we won’t mind. 

However, in the real world, this theory is turned upside down. Morons often do have an outsized air about them and are far more cantankerous and pugnacious than the talented lot. Suffering from inferiority complex, being rude is the only way they hope to cover their deficiencies. Pity those with the ego of Hitler and the courage of a rat before a cat.   

The badass question is: what can we do about these pathetic specimens of humanity? They cannot be wished away by a magic wand. These freaks are here to stay embedded among us in our schools, offices, hospitals, aircrafts, and in all places we can think of. There are only three ways to handle these people, who were born half-baked, so to say. One, just ignore their shrill bells and whistles and absorb only the substantive content of their outbursts, which are mostly empty posturings. When provoked, maintain calm and stare at their face with the tranquility of a Buddha in sleep. Take the wind out of their sails and see how their shipload of rudeness sinks. 

Two, if you don’t have the guts to follow the above strategy, then go for the most effective way: just avoid them. Don’t walk in the street they frequent; don’t use the lift they take; don’t meet the people they socialize with, don’t eat the food they like or you may end up buying it from the same place—best of all, don’t stay in the country where they live. Seriously, avoid all situations and circumstances in which they might come into your way. 

Third strategy is to confront them head on and tell them to back off. (Disclaimer: this strategy will backfire if the person concerned is your boss or someone in superior position). The motto here would be: 

An eye for an eye—only more. If they raise their voice, shout at them. If they abuse you, give them their due with the choicest swearwords referring to their female ancestors or something. If they shove you, punch them in the face. Deal with the consequences, of course. 

Sarcasm, as against rudeness, is a different ball game altogether. It’s a thinking man’s rudeness. A sarcastic person is a master of subtlety. The tone of sarcasm is mocking and ironic, but a skillful sarcastic person often gets away with it. (Sample this: A sarcastic person, when hit by a bike from a wrong direction, would remark at the rider, “Thank you very much, you made my day.”)

A sarcastic person is like a sleek needle while a rude person is like an unfinished machete. I am not an advocate of sarcasm, but if given a choice, I wouldn’t mind being pricked than attacked with an ugly weapon. 

But, what the hell! I don’t care. Rudes, get lost. 

Romesh shoraisham

Your story is interested to me. After reading your story i use to think about our state. Friend nowadays our society seem to decline from the former culture of our tradition. Look around, seem only the fault there is no one who do the right. Corruption to

Comments are closed for this entry.

Copyright © 2003. The Sangai Express

Privacy Policy    |    Disclaimers    |    Contact Us

Developed by : Think BIG!