Ever
since I attended business school thirty five years ago I have been obsessed
with measurement. That is one thing
business school does to you. It teaches
you that you cannot evaluate what you cannot measure. And, at the risk of oversimplifying, management
is all about evaluation or assessment.
So it teaches you to measure all kinds of phenomena.
Before I bought my new scooter I worked out the number of trips I would need to make to my office to recover the investment I would make in the scooter that I wished to replace my car with. I did this under multiple scenarios, depending on when I would sell the scooter, in case it started giving me a back-ache.
Although I am a terrible penny pincher myself, occasionally I give away a minuscule fraction of my relatively meagre earnings to people or causes I consider deserving. I keep track of every paisa of it, right in my head.
I guess you get the picture – I am one helluva measurement monster.
Nanni….Namaskaaram…
Over
time I took my tendency to measure to new levels of obsessiveness. Long before we were invaded by fit bits I
used to count the number of steps I walked.
I measure with great effort the time it takes me to chant various slokas. I have carried out extensive analyses of the speeds at which I chant the
many slokas I know by heart and the time it takes to complete each of them at
the various speeds I chant them.
I measure
the number of shaves I get with each disposable razor and therefore the cost of
each shave. I have a meter running in
my head that calculates the cost of each shave, including the number of shaves I get from a can of foam versus the slivers of shaving cream I would have used instead.
I
estimated the number of cups of tea that I needed to make on the new water heater
that I bought for making tea in my office for Rs 900. Each time I make a cup of tea I remind myself of how many more cups I would need to have made before the heater would have paid for
itself. I reset this number for the fact
the price of a cup of tea in coffee shops increased even while I was recovering
the cost of the heater.
Let me
also remind you that before I bought the heater I had figured out that the time
taken to make my own tea was less than the time spent in going to the faculty lounge for
having tea. And this did not include the
time I spent often in gossip at the lounge. When I worked out the time spent on such
gossip tea at the lounge would often prove to be even more costly as I took time to work out
the emotions that would get stirred up on getting to know things at the lounge, that I would
have been better off not knowing.
Before I bought my new scooter I worked out the number of trips I would need to make to my office to recover the investment I would make in the scooter that I wished to replace my car with. I did this under multiple scenarios, depending on when I would sell the scooter, in case it started giving me a back-ache.
Although I am a terrible penny pincher myself, occasionally I give away a minuscule fraction of my relatively meagre earnings to people or causes I consider deserving. I keep track of every paisa of it, right in my head.
I guess you get the picture – I am one helluva measurement monster.
Now, that
is not without collateral costs.
It makes me a miserable spouse, father, son, son-in-law, sibling,
nephew, colleague and whatever else. I
can go on.
Luckily for me and the women of
this world I have never been a boy-friend.
Imagine the reaction of this woman who realizes that I had been
measuring the cost per unit of intimate moment that I spent with her by
dividing the cost of an evening out with her by the number of minutes I got to look at her beautiful
face or hold her delicate hand!
I have pressed
on with my counting, remorselessly, all these years. I
have believed that life would be one unstructured financial and emotional spaghetti
if one did not measure everything.
But, out of
the blue, some weeks back this question struck me like a bolt: What would I do with the results of all those
measurements when it is time to move on? .
This question
crossed my mind a few weeks back again when I had occasion to interact with this
super wealthy benefactor. He is a fairly
old man. My first thought was that the measurements that this man would have to
deal with would be too many, too complex and too large for my puny, tiny brain.
Just
as instantly this other thought started bothering me: What would happen when he
left this world, as indeed he would have to some time? How relevant would all that measurement be to him once he ceased to be in this
world?
It occurred to me that whatever we measure in life does not seem to matter in
the larger scheme of things. That said,
I do not know what makes for that larger scheme of things.
It did
occur to me though that once I am gone what would matter is what I have done
for those that I leave behind. The joy I
would be able to give them out of what I have provided them would matter I am
sure to them. The misery I would leave
behind by the hurt I may have caused would matter just as much.
Ironically, business school did not teach me how to measure such emotions. Which is perhaps why we always talk about
indescribable joy or immeasurable suffering.
If you cannot describe how can you measure?
Under the
circumstances it appeared reasonably safe to say this about the larger scheme
of things though: What one can measure does
not seem to matter. And what matters, it
seems, one can never measure, to quote that miserable genius Albert Einstein.
Nanni….Namaskaaram…