Hippo
Rage (A speech which brought the house down in Quebec)
by David Leonhardt
Has anybody here ever been stuck in traffic
for a frustratingly long time? Put up your hand if you have.
Oooh! Don’t you just hate that? And some people don’t mind
showing us how much they hate it. We call it road rage.
Has anybody ever waited in a ticket lineup
or a checkout lineup for a frustratingly long time? Let me see those
hands.
Believe it or not, some people don’t like
that either. We call it lineup rage.
Has anybody ever been stuck waiting in a
doctor’s office for a frustratingly long time? Let me see those hands.
And then you see somebody suddenly jump up
and tear his hair out and scream, “Let me out. I’ve been here
three hours. Three days. Three months!” Well, I really should
apologize. I didn’t mean to scare your kids. I was just demonstrating
waiting room rage.
Let me tell you a story about the Lwangwa
River Valley – that’s in Africa, you know. The dry season there gets
very dry. My throat is getting dry just thinking about it. The Lwangwa
River stops rushing. It slows to a trickle. Finally, it stops
flowing. And all that are left are pools of water, here and there.
One by one, the animals head to higher
ground. To forest cover. To other water holes. Anywhere they can find food
or drink. Just like we will all do late. Did I say all the animals? Not
all. Not the hippos.
The hippos stay in their river at it slows
to a stream. They stay in the stream as it turns into pools. They
stay in the pools as they shrink into puddles. As the puddles shrink, the
hippos get more crowded. As the hippos get more crowded, they get surly.
Cranky. Grumpy. They gnash their teeth. They poke at each other.
They pick fights. It’s river rage!
Has anyone ever come face to face with a
raging hippopotamus? Don’t be shy. Go ahead, put up your hands. Sure,
when we’re young – I’m sure you all remember this as I do –
we’re taught that they’re slow, cute, and cuddly. They might even be
pink or purple and do those dances in tutus like in Fantasia. But in the
real world they have teeth the size of your head. They can run faster than
anyone in this room. And they weight upwards of 5,000 pounds. I
mean, they are BIG! If you’re ever at a cocktail party and a
hippopotamus starts, you know, flirting with you, whatever you do, do not
let him sit on your lap.
Rage is all the rage these days. Road rage.
Lineup rage. Waiting room rage. Even river rage. You may also have heard
of parking lot rage, elevator rage and airplane rage. What gives? Is the
world getting angrier or just more crowded?
Both. It’s a fact that as our space and
time grow increasingly crowded, our stress levels rise.
When it comes to space, we are cramming
more people into more crowded cities, elevators, airplanes, stores. Our
patience diminishes. Our good will diminishes. Our tolerance diminishes.
Has anyone noticed they place the chairs at conferences – you noticed!
– so close together that even skinny people get to know each other well.
My theory is that the hotels are trying to develop their own niche rage
market: conference seating rage.
Let’s look at our schedules. What are we
trying to do? We’re trying to see how many items we can squeeze onto our
“to do” list, and how many activities we can cram into a day. And the
stress, where does it go? Right up there, exactly.
I want to share this one little thought
with you. We are in the process of moving, so we actually have two homes.
Stress that builds in my stacked concrete box apartment they call a condo,
I can’ t get rid of. It sticks. I can’t shake it off.
It won’t go. It sticks. When I’m at my farm house just a few
miles south of here, surrounded by grass and trees, it’s amazing how
quickly I can just excommunicate the stress. Can I say that?
Excommunicate? Why not?
OK. What have we learned today? Three
lessons, so please take note.
Number one, don’t let your space get too crowded.
Number two, don’t let your schedule get too crowded.
Number three, and this is the most
important of all, don’t ever, ever let a hippopotamus sit on your
lap.
____________________
David Leonhardt is The Happy Guy,
and author of Climb your Stairway to Heaven: The 9 Habits of Maximum
Happiness. Visit him at http://www.TheHappyGuy.com.