Hornbill Unleashed

September 29, 2009

About social grace – or lack of it

Kaypo Anak Sarawak is a Columnist  of  Hermit Hornbill at The Borneo Post Online , His article is  published  in The Borneo Post every Sunday. (Used by permission of the Author )

anti-social behaviour in public places

I WAS having my dinner in the clean coffee shop in my neighbourhood and enjoying a beautiful Malaysian September sunset.

This scraggy young man sat down at   the next table. Then he tilted his head backwards, gurgled for a few seconds, and with a “ptwit..!” he   spit on the floor. He repeated this disgusting action a few times. I was nauseated, and walked   away from my unfinished dinner, fuming.

I should have walked over to him and reprimanded him politely but firmly. But a young man who is so ill-bred as to spit in a public eatery will probably beat me up if I had scolded him anyway!

You see anti-social behaviour in public places like that everywhere.

Once I was in this airplane which was taxiing on the runway seconds before it was to take off. Then a mobile phone rang, and the passenger next to me started a conversation.

using mbile in plane

The flight attendant was trying to ask him to switch off the phone, but he turned away and continued the conversation. The ugly incident ended when his phone was forcibly removed from his hand.

Whenever I hear people howl into a mobile phone in a public place, I get a king-size headache and curse the inventor of this ubiquitous machine.

Now, I notice that road courtesy is dying out in Sarawak. Once you put a perfectly nice individual into the quiet privacy of his car cab, alienating him from the rest of the universe, he turns into a selfish rude road warrior! He drives as if his father owns and builds the public roads.

He sees other road users as potential competitors for the common public space or enemies even, hurling curses and obscenities at the stupidity of everyone else on the road.  A small accident will lead to a violent fisticuff, sometimes with fatal consequences.

Nowhere else is this anti-social selfish behaviour more apparent than the car parks.

Some of my neighbourhood shops have been turn into a tuition centre. Parents will just double-park their cars to wait for their children to finish their tuition session, even though there are vacant parking bays around.

They love their children so much that they cannot endure the suffering of their children walking a few yards to their parked car, but they do not care how they block off the entire street! Their charity begins and stops at home!

Double - parking

Then, there are those parents who let their children behave wildly in public places as if they are still at home. In shopping malls, in restaurants and eateries, and even in cinemas, they allow their children to run around playing and screaming, without a care of how these brats irritate other members of the public. These are the adults who have no ability to feel ashamed when inconveniencing other people.

Naturally, their children grow up to inherit all their bad manners.

This lack of civic virtue is also amply demonstrated by litterbugs. Once the garbage is thrown out of their hands and onto the public road, it is no longer their problem.

They feel no responsibility for the public space that they share with other members of the public. Is that why we can never find a clean public toilet anywhere, except in the posh hotels and restaurants?

Once I met a man walking his dog in the park in my neighbourhood. I greeted him, complimented him for the beauty of his dog, and advised him to walk the dog more for exercise. He replied, saying he needed to allow the dog to defecate in the bushes. A responsible dog owner would have carried a plastic bag, and picked up after his animal with a plastic glove, instead of soiling the neighbourhood green!

I think our towns and cities have grown too large and too rapidly; the capitalist philosophy has taken hold over new generations of Malaysians. They just take care of themselves and their immediate family, and the rest of the world can go fly kite.

capitalismisnotworkingThe toxic selfishness of capitalism has also seeped into the minds of some individuals, and considering the needs of others in public places has never entered their mind.

It may also have something to do with their sense of over-bloated self-esteem. They have made it, and the world is at their feet to serve their needs, and their needs must have priority over the needs of others!

Fortunately, most of us are still quite polite in our public behaviour. We have somehow internalised the subjective but unwritten rules of public conduct. We know that breaking those rules will subject us to the scorn of others.

We have more or less accepted that we should not do unto others what we do not want them to do unto us. We always ask ourselves this question: “What if everybody does this undesirable action?” Then we teach our children accordingly.

I am not talking about having the correct social etiquette alone.

Etiquette is merely the set of conventional rules that sets out the minimum standards of politeness and mutual respect.

Knowing the etiquette does not necessarily make you a nice person; in fact, it is a short-cut to hypocrisy sometimes.

etiquettexI am talking about the moral or ethical ethos, the need for all members of the community to respect the truth that we are all responsible for the well-being of one another.

In public space, we must watch out for others, just as we expect them to watch out for us.

This moral imperative is far more important than learning the basic rules of public behaviour.

In short, when we are moving in public space, we are never lone spectators with our private agenda only. We are also participants in the common agenda of keeping the common physical public space clean, orderly, and safe.

For instance, when we witness a bad car accident in our journey, we do not stop our car, and take down the car plate number to buy a four-digit ticket later. We do not drive on as if nothing happens. We park our car in a place that would not block the traffic, and go to investigate whether we can help or not, including sending the bleeding victim to the nearest hospital!

No man is an island; all human beings are social and communal animals.

The greatness of any society must surely be judged partly by how we treat one another in public. Even small gestures of courtesy, like saying ‘good morning’, ‘thank you’, ‘please’, and ‘good bye’, are the lubricants that nurture civilised relationship in our daily social interactions.

So next time, when you are in a public place, watch your social grace.

(The writer can be reached at bapakmiki@yahoo.com)

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5 Comments »

  1. haha

    Comment by AZREN AZEN BIN SALEH — April 1, 2011 @ 10:11 PM | Reply

  2. I live in the UK now and you often hear how rude younger people can be here. I was pleasantly surprised yesterday by the manners of a young couple. I was headed to the ATM to withdraw some money and they got there first. He started fumbling around in his wallet for his card but then noticed that I was standing in line. He immediately stepped away and told me I could go first. That was indeed a pleasant surprise. Someone’s mother taught him right. Just my 2p worth that there are some well mannered people for all the bad-mannered ones you have the misfortune to meet.

    Comment by Skirt — September 29, 2009 @ 10:30 PM | Reply

  3. I know exactly what you mean. I was having lunch at a store just this afternoon and this uncouth idiot was practically shouting loudly into his mobile phone. Every sentence was punctuated with two or three foul words. It din’t matter to him that his son was with him or the next table was full of ladies.

    Unfortunately Malaysians are turning into an ugly lot. People like you mentioned, there are everywhere and it’s impossible to escape them. One is not even spared when attending church. Don’t you hate it that here you are trying to communicate with God and have those rude and noisy kids running around. Some parents even think their kids are cute when people turn back to glare at their them.

    Talking about motorists. just watch at how drivers behave coming out of a church compound. You’d think that they are rushing to get to heaven. We laugh at Singaporeans being kiasu but we are no better or even worse. How about those idiotic neighbours who have to blow their car horn upon arriving home because they are too lazy to get down and open the house gate themselves. It’s like they are trying to compete with the old newspapers recycle man. And those morons who park haphazardly and deprive others of a parking bay? Don’t you feel like scratching their cars? I know of someone who get so incensed by this that he does it frequently. Not that I approve of it. If you think Kuching is bad, wait till you live in Sibu. Even young lady drivers are rude.

    Comment by Ah Beng — September 29, 2009 @ 5:30 PM | Reply

  4. Driving in Kuching can be very stressful for some .First you have to deal with numerous traffic lights ,just try driving along green road and you know exactly what I mean.Seconday the Kuching road planning has a lot to be desired .you often encounter two lanes turn into 4 lanes at traffic junctions.some smart council man has decided to have u turn at traffic lights and exit left freely.all this rules are against traffic rules as those who study traffic system will tell you.I do urge all drivers to be extra patient and be courteous while on the road .
    Parking woes happens in busy locations and areas around schools.I was told there is this unwritten rules among all parents.those who came late can park of block those cars that came earlier provided they leave first.what a strange unwritten rule but it has worked very well among the parents who pick their children from school.another thing we witness is indiscrimate parking.this must not be condone and traffic police must fine the culprits.

    Comment by Akai — September 29, 2009 @ 5:30 PM | Reply

  5. A sad but accurate snapshot of our society at large. More than once we have witnessed mind boggling scenes like the coffee shop “gurgler”, one wonders what drives them? Maybe if we dwell deeper we would identify an artist expressing his inner self! Jokes aside , thanks Kaypo for the reflections
    :)

    Comment by Homeboy — September 29, 2009 @ 8:12 AM | Reply


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