Pursuit of Excellence: A search for meaning
‘It was so very awesome you called. The whole day I was like, this is getting too much. Give me a break someone! And then you rung. O my God! I was like, I’ll go crazy.’
I heard the voice cooing with delight
over the phone. For months people have been holed up indoors, working from home,
though for many this is a bigger hole than their office. Tempers are
justifiably frayed. An unexpected call from a friend in the evening, after
hours of drudgery, with a couple of more to go, is a sufficient reason for
delight.
Our Corona enforced proximity had
emboldened me. The ‘awesomes’ and the ‘I was likes’ grated in my hearing, like
a piece of eggshell in an omelette.
‘Don’t you think it is good to be
clear in conversation? Won’t your friends appreciate if they hear concise words
which have the beauty of clarity?’
My gratuitous advice rankled the young
one. Now I received an unambiguous rejoinder.
‘Language is not important. Your
thoughts are. These days people do not want to waste time on choosing great
words. Definition of beauty changes with time. Anyway, it is of no use. Rather,
we are put off by a fussy language.’
Language is not important? Beauty has
no place in language? Is awesome such a versatile word? Can it be used to
express joyful surprise on receiving a friend’s call, to describe an entertaining
movie, a page-turner novel, an enjoyable meal, a lovely new hair-cut? And it
can also describe the joy of viewing Vincent van Gogh’s Sunflowers in
the National Gallery or Raphael’s over-lifesize cartoons at Victoria &
Albert’s, a visit to Louvre, sight of Snow-domed Kailash in the background of
illimitable Mansarovar at fifteen thousand feet in the desolate Tibetan
plateau, Nasiruddin Shah’s performance in Mirza Ghalib and Rajan & Sajan
Mishra singing, ‘Aaye sur ke panchi aaye’. Should one not distinguish in
speech, a simple joy from an experience that simply takes your breath away?
Isn’t glee different from ecstasy? Doesn’t awesome suggest an element of
wonder, an unbelievable magnificence? Doesn’t our language influence our
thoughts too? Should we dull the vivid world of our sensations by colouring all
experience in one hue? Is the effort spent in learning this discernment of no
avail?
And then the final blow.
‘You see, this obsession with
excellence is quite off-putting. It’s stuffy and high-brow.’
This set me thinking. Does pursuit of
excellence require an apology? Does it serve no purpose in life? Is it an
obsessive trait best left to atrophy in the ignominy of constant disuse?
Our lives, in the cosmic sense, are
futile. Species originate and disappear like bubbles in the boundless ocean of
time. Dinosaurs ruled the earth for hundred million years and vanished
overnight in a freak cosmic accident when a giant asteroid, the Chicxulub, with
a diameter between 11-81 Km, collided with earth, sixty-five million years ago.
Mammals survived this catastrophe only because they were then represented by the tiny little,
Shrew-like, nocturnal insectivores which dwelled underground. Disappearance of
Dinosaurs was a god-sent opportunity–rather space-sent–for mammals. They now
flowered with a prodigious exuberance. Homo Sapiens came along three hundred thousand
years ago and now are the most successful species of mammals that ever lived on
earth.
Asteroids abound in space. Though
extremely rare, when another asteroid like Chicxulub will strike the earth again,
cannot be predicted. But it is known that humans will not survive such a
mammoth collision. Life could perish in several other ways: man-made
catastrophes like climate change, nuclear holocaust, a genetically engineered
disease; a cold death in a cyclical ice-age; a scorching annihilation as earth
is engulfed by a disintegrating sun in the Red Giant stage. No hint will then
remain of our existence. Our millennia old refinements of culture will
disappear without a trace: Mahabharat and Geeta, philosophy of Plato, art of
renaissance, sonnets of Shakespeare, tales of Chekhov, Parthenon, Colosseum, Taj
mahal. And if some fossils, some ruins survive, these will await chance origin
of intelligent life to discern their story (In this epoch, intelligence evolved
3.5 billion years after the birth of life on earth). We would just stop
existing. Universe will not be an iota poorer. It will go on grinding,
majestically and apathetically, as per its mute, insentient laws. But with none
to understand its rhythm.
There is only one universal meaning in
life: its meaninglessness. Suffering in life is eternal. For majority, joys are
few and far apart. In past, till about a century and a half back, barring a
miniscule of rich, for most people– and for millions of my countrymen even
today– act of living was a relentless toil, spent in a never-ending struggle to
find enough food to feed the body and shelter and clothes to protect it from
harsh weather. There is no rational explanation for life’s pleasures and pains.
In this uncertain life, a meaning, a purpose for living, although illusory,
provides a much-needed succour to the soul.
Pursuit of excellence is one human
endeavour which restores semblance of an order to the randomness in life. It
affords us a purpose; an undying quest. Submerged in this, life seems to
acquire the glow of a meaningful existence. Excellence is not an objective
which can be achieved within a limited time. Its pursuit becomes a way of
living, which enriches life perennially.
Bunraku is a puppetry art form in
Japan, where three men work a large puppet. For a decade a Bunraku apprentice
works only the legs of the puppet, in the next decade he learns to work left
arm. His third decade is spent learning movements of right arm, head, eyes, and
eyebrows. Only then is he a mature craftsman who is now visible to the
audience, while his two apprentices, hidden, assist him.
Indian classical music is one of the
finest intricate systems of music in world. For centuries its masters have
followed a rigid system for imparting this knowledge to their few disciples.
Almost all its great practitioners have learned their art in the Guru-Shishya
tradition. Guru, the teacher, is punctilious in their choice of Shishya, the students.
Process of learning is arduous and protracted. For few years, young acolytes,
many below ten, learn nothing but daily chores of living. Guru imparts not only
the secret of musical notes to his pupil, but a philosophy of life which
encompasses but is not confined to music. After years of learning, echoes of this
training are heard in the ethereal music of the artist. Their music is
resplendent not only with the nuances of sound but with emotions and sentiments
which enrich human life. Every such artist asserts that music is their eternal
quest. None seems to sit back and enjoy the glory of the objective they have
achieved after decades of strenuous training. They appear to exult in the
pursuit of excellence, which is never-ending.
Search of excellence is a hard work.
Rewards are inordinately delayed, if obtained ever. One must consider the quest
an award in itself. Pleasure should be in the knowledge that one is striving
after something beautiful and perhaps will create a little of it someday.
Japanese language has a word Shokunin Katagi. It means artisanal spirit.
This does not refer to the skill of an artist. It alludes to the process of creating
something beautiful, which should also be deliberate, beautiful, and calm. Thus,
Japanese endow the mundane acts of daily living with a sublime charm, a thoroughness
which transforms the pedestrian acts of a work-a-day life into an art worth
pursuing: be it making tea, gardening or the work of an artisan.
Excellence demands diligence. This is
easily mistaken for a fastidious behaviour, if one ignores the process and
focusses only on the objective. When I was young, we lived in small houses, rarely
bigger than two rooms; My father’s job took us to a new town every few years. Our
possessions were few. My parents kept the house spic and span. Everything had a
place, every activity a time. These were followed scrupulously, not by the
dictate of martinet parents, but voluntarily as a system of living. House never
looked cluttered. My mother’s most valuable possession was a hand-operated Usha
sewing machine. She used it often, cleaned it before every use and once done,
pushed the heavy machine beneath a bed, its destined place. Even after decades I
remember its shining, black and steel grey surface. She oiled it every month
and tightened the loosened parts. The set of small screwdrivers, bottle of oil
and the small dusting cloth were stored in a small recess in the body of the
machine. I do not remember the machine ever needed to be seen by a mechanic.
Father was fond of gardening. In the evenings, I would hang around him as he
worked in his kitchen-garden. Plant-beds were laid meticulously in geometric
shapes. Saplings were planted in straight rows and columns. He had even dug up a
system of drains, so that water flowed to every bed when poured at the source.
Parents performed all the household
chores with this thoroughness. Each task, however mundane, seemed thought out. This
was their modus vivendi. I never heard them complain about these and though
they never said so, I presume, the mere act of performing the tasks the way they
thought these should be done, gave them joy and satisfaction. Life, it
appeared, was following a pattern, not flowing haphazardly.
Excellence is often confused with
perfection. These are two different realms. Perfection seems to be an end in
itself. It implies stasis; once achieved, there can only be stagnation. Since
it denotes an objective towards which one must strive, path leading to it is often
perceived as hostile and laborious. Concept of perfection is itself ambiguous.
It is difficult to define perfection in an activity. There are innumerable
yardsticks to gauge perfection in any human endeavour. One man’s idea of perfection
may be another’s idea of ordinary. Excellence is open-ended. It is not a
destination to be reached, but the joys of following multiple paths that lead
towards light. Excellence is dynamic. It denotes a mode of living. In its
shade, life becomes a continuum of placid joys. It is no more an interminable
saga comprising eternal chase of newer goals, interspersed with short ecstatic
respites.
Equating excellence with perfection
also prompts contempt for it. Idea of perfection seems to imply existence of
imperfect. Latter is another source of distasteful inequality in an unequal
world. Excellence in any activity demands steadfastness towards chosen path.
Not all can command the stamina or motivation to pursue this course. Since
excellence in artforms is most visible, any one lacking these is deemed a
philistine. This excites a spiteful disdain for excellence. But excellence is
not the sole preserve of art. It is practiced in every field of human activity:
profession of medicine or law, in masonry and cooking, in writing books or
composing office correspondence, in planning a grand public park and by the
gardener who tends to it, in the oration of public speakers and the routine
lectures of a university professor, in the cutting edge research in science and
in the shop-worn application of this research in their routine jobs by various
professionals.
Range of human activity is vast. A
person, if so endowed, can excel in a very limited field of this repertoire. He
is bound to be average in most and even abominably poor in some. Those who find
striving for excellence a superfluous preoccupation of a vain mind often direct
their disapproval at the ordinary in such individuals.
Excellence enriches and sustains our
lives. I am in the profession of Medicine. When I was studying in the medical
school, it was a common refrain of our seniors that ‘medicine is an art.’ I
cannot deny that being equated with artists did not elevate our stature in own
eyes. It seemed to put us at a higher pedestal amongst other hoi polloi
professionals. After practicing medicine for more than a quarter of a century,
I have learnt that it is an art only because it demands an unyielding lifelong
passion to refine one’s knowledge and skills, to excel in its practice. This
zeal of few keeps the practice of medicine in its track. It continuously
informs those who do not cultivate this ardour, about the values, the
possibilities, and the joys of their true and pure profession.
Excellence in any sphere has the
indelible imprint of the individual who created it. This bespeaks the long
arduous time spent in honing and refining these skills. Mediocrity is the product
of masses. It identifies with none, it assimilates all. It requires no unusual
effort. It is imbibed reflexively by our brain which has learnt the technique
of imitation as a useful learning tool. But this all-inclusive nature deprives
the commonplace of the singularity ingrained in excellence. Mediocrity thus,
spawns a world of robotic individuals going about their life with a
machine-like insipid uniformity.
But mediocrity has many virtues. One
is the ease with which it can be acquired and practiced. It is believed that
our bodies try to conserve energy in every task they perform. Mediocrity may
then be the default state of all human activity. Mediocrity has its rewards
too. In a world where everything is measured in terms of its cost and benefit
ratio, excellence comes expensive.
Happiness is a universal human goal.
Evanescence of pleasure this quest brings is also an inescapable truth in our
lives. Pursuit of excellence provides a revitalizing breather from the
mind-numbing monotony in life that is the lot of most. This endeavour may also
beget something beautiful. Beauty is the only offspring of human mind which can
lay claim to a modicum of longevity in our transient world. But none adopts the
rigours of this path to create beauty for others. One takes this road because they
cannot tread any other. Yet beauty is a source of joy for the whole mankind.
Shouldn’t this be a sufficient justification– though arrived at in hindsight–
for seeking excellence in every sphere of life?
Can one imagine a world without the
Great Pyramids, Euclidean geometry, Aryabhata’s mathematics, Kalidas’s Meghdoot,
Michelangelo’s David, Copernican astronomy, Galileo’s physics, Newton’s Principia
Mathematica, David Hume’s A Treatise of Human Nature, Adam Smith’s The
Wealth of Nations, Louis Pasteur’s Germ Theory of Diseases,
Darwin’s Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection, Einstein’s General
Relativity, Heisenberg’s Principal of Uncertainty, Ghalib’s ghazals,
Faiz’s nazms, Songs of Lata Mangeshkar, Kishori Amonkar’s Bhoop, TN
Krishnan’s Raghuvamsa Sudha, Maharajapuram Santhanam’s Mohanam,
Cinema of Satyajit Ray and Bimal Roy, Richard Dawkins’ Selfish Genes, Charles
Dickens’ David Copperfield, Somerset Maugham’s Of Human Bondage, Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, and all the ways humans have embellished life for millennia. All these
are the fruits of the pursuit of excellence. Without them, world would be an
inhospitable forest of desolate aridity.
G.H. Hardy was one of the greatest
Mathematician of twentieth century. In his twilight years (i.e., twilight of
his creative life), he wrote an essay, A Mathematician’s Apology. Though
the essay lays a defence for the practice of pure mathematics, it is an
artist’s finest account of his art. All science, as mathematics, is a form of
art. In the last section of the essay, Hardy sums up his arguments for
practicing ‘real’ mathematics.
‘…solicitors and stockbrokers and bookmakers often lead comfortable and
happy lives, and it is very difficult to see how the world is richer for their
existence. Is there any sense in which I can claim that my life has been less
futile than theirs? ...I have never done anything ‘useful’. No discovery of
mine has made, or is likely to make, directly or indirectly, for good or ill,
the least difference to the amenity of the world. …I have just one chance of
escaping a verdict of complete triviality, that I may be judged to have created
something worth creating. And that I have created something is undeniable: the
question is about its value.
The case for my life, then, or for that of any one else who has been a
mathematician in the same sense in which I have been one, is this: that I have
added something to knowledge, and helped others to add more; and that these
somethings have a value which differs in degree only, and not in kind, from
that of the creations of the great mathematicians, or of any of the other
artists, great or small, who have left some kind of memorial behind them.’
Pursuit of excellence creates an
oasis in a desert of lacklustre mediocrity that surrounds us. Excellence is a
touchstone for the many-hued ingenuity of human mind, a beacon for the sublime
beauty human mind is capable of creating. I pray this quest remains alive
amongst humans, if only to inform posterity of the meaning of a flawless
creation and to equip it with a sensitivity to appreciate distinction. And thus,
to afford mankind a refuge, where, as Bertrand Russell said (though he spoke of
beauty in Mathematics), ‘one at least of our nobler impulses can best escape
from the dreary exile of the actual world.’
very well written Rajiv , was wondering whether this is partly biographical as well ! the balance of power between mediocrity and life of discernment will always be tipped towards the obvious numbers, on a lighter note we have seen enough that for most food is a mere morsel to give energy and survive and for a few every bit is a gastronomic delight. The journey of life has a meaning or not is a difficult question and this quest is sometimes easy if you have the gift of belief and at least for me with an unquestionable acceptance for Divinity life becomes meaningful
ReplyDeleteRajan
Thanks Rajan. For reading this long post and for thoughtful comments.
ReplyDeleteLife's experience is difficult to weed out from writing, even in fiction. Only greatest minds can paint a believable picture from imagination. To this extent, yes, my musings are things I have seen from close quarters.
To an extent, I agree that we have our basic needs satisfied and hence can now brood over the highest need in Maslow's hierarchy, that of self-actualization, a seemingly pompous word.
Faith, to those who can summon it, provides hope and strength to face vagaries of fate.
My comment threatens to exceed the length of the article. I must stop.
Sir you have written this so beautifully. May be perfection and happiness are like mirages which have to be pursued all the time. As brought out by you, the beauty lies in the chase and there is a sense of emptiness, a what next feeling once it has been achieved. A part of it where you are describing events of your childhood reads like a ruskin bond. Please keep writing, it gives so much pleasure to read them.
ReplyDeleteThanks Panda.
DeleteA very thin line separates perfection and excellence, in my opinion. Some may say it is nitpicking. You have been pursuing excellence in many spheres, most conspicuously in mountaineering and would know the rigors and the ecstasies well.
You have been kind with your praise. To write like Ruskin Bond must me a dream of many. Such easy style, marvelous simplicity and lucidity, comes with years of practice and not little innate skill.