Don’t come to Africa if you think you have nothing to learn here. Take the west with all its time saving gadgets and falsely modest claims of the workaholic and see that it is yet unsatisfied, as empty as a vacuum.
One of the Rats of Nimh on the short story, The Rat Race
“It was about a woman in a small town who bought a vacuum cleaner. Her name was Mrs. Jones, and up until then she, like all her neighbors, had kept her house spotlessly clean by using a broom and a mop. But the vacuum cleaner did it faster and better, and soon Mrs. Jones was the envy of all the other housewives in town- so they bought vacuum cleaners, too.
The vacuum cleaner business was so brisk, in fact, that the company that made them opened a branch factory in town. The factory used a lot of electricity, of course, and so did the women with their vacuum cleaners, so the local electric power company had to put up a big new plant to keep them all running. In its furnaces the power plant burned coal, and out of its chimneys black smoke poured day and night, blanketing the town with soot and making all the floors dirtier than ever. Still, by working twice as hard and twice as long the women of the town were able to keep their floors almost as clean as they had been before Mrs. Jones ever bought a vacuum cleaner in the first place.
…the reason I had read it so eagerly was that it was called “The Rat Race”- which, I learned, means a race where, no matter how fast you run, you don’t get anywhere. But there was nothing in the book about rats, and I felt bad about the title because, I thought, it wasn’t a rat race at all, it was a People Race…”
swidinst
03/17/2009Thank you.
kari
03/19/2009no, thank YOU
joie
03/17/2009mrs frisby and the rats of nimh! man, i LOVED that book. i have to go get it and reread it now.
you are, as always, inspiring. merci.
kari
03/19/2009one of the few books i’ve been able to get my feverish little mitts on in senegal. it’s so magical. now i’m looking for the indian in the cupboard and i think i have a bead on a copy..
Ian
03/18/2009Thanks for sharing this – to my alarm, I found I haven’t even read the darn thing.
Splendid post, Kari.
kari
03/19/2009let me know when you get a chance to read it, ian from london.
Taylor Davidson
03/22/2009We continually fight our addiction to instant, addictive communication; many of the current communication tools we use are an example of (and exploit) basic research performed by B.F. Skinner (on rats, oddly enough) on the incredible behavior-altering power of “positive variable intermittent reinforcement”. Powerful stuff :)
Tim
04/24/2009I’m in for 3 rounds if I can eat the leaves after.