WGS 2016: Noted Travel Writer Pico Iyer Urges Attendees of World Government Summit to Embrace Stillness
· Iyer commends summit for including and valuing sessions on stillness and ‘inner resources’
· Humans today suffer from information overload that is causing stress worldwide
· Stillness can improve not only inner happiness, but also success at work
Dubai-UAE: According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), the health epidemic of the 21st century is stress. Stress is draining US$4 billion out of the United States economy.
Headlining a session on ‘Stillness in the Digital Age’ on day two of the World Government Summit, international essayist, novelist and travel writer Pico Iyer offered a seemingly simple solution to issues of stress and the overwhelming nature of connectivity in the digital age: stillness.
Speaking about his own experiences as a travel writer who is constantly globe-trotting, Iyer said: “I find that the more I move, the more I need stillness, just to make sense of my movements.”
Iyer thanked the organizers of the World Government Summit for inviting him and including a session on ‘stillness’ in a summit otherwise filled with issues of global urgency. He said: “I am impressed that the World Government Summit understands and acknowledges the value of inner resources and the invisible self-government inside us that is just as important.”
He reiterated that most humans today face an information overload, which he believes is making people overwhelmed and causing them to suffer from ‘data obesity’.
Commenting on the stress that this information overload is causing people, Iyer said: “Humans were never meant to live at a pace determined by machines. We were meant to live at the speed of life, not at the speed of light.”
However, he acknowledged that machines and technological devices are here to stay and that it is not the devices that are the problem, but the inability of humans to step away from those devices that is causing stress.
Iyer acknowledged that human beings do not necessarily have a choice about remaining connected, calling it “a rollercoaster you never asked to get on, but you can’t get off.” He went on to argue that people can take control of their own circumstances because “the one good thing about stress is that it is caused by ourselves, so it can be cured by ourselves.”
Citing the example of China, he said 400 ‘internet rescue’ camps have been instituted to help kids who are addicted to their devices to get help. A Harvard University study found that 67% of male respondents would rather receive electroshock treatment than be put in a room without their devices.
Concluding his session, the writer urged attendees to take time out of their days, even 30 minutes, to be still and take a break from their jobs and their devices. He said: “I do suspect that all of you probably don’t need more movement, more distraction in your life, but much less. To begin to do your jobs, you need to step away from your jobs.”
Iyer pointed out that ‘stillness’ did not necessarily have to include meditation or yoga, but could be observed through taking a few days break every year to places less connected by devices, playing golf, listening to music by oneself and being mindful to bring some amount of quiet and peace into one’s life. He posited that this would make people not only more successful and productive, but also happier and kinder throughout their lives.
In his wrap-up remarks, Iyer said: “We rightly think and talk a lot about making a living, but really what we should be thinking about is about is making a life.”
The World Government Summit has convened over 3,000 personalities from 125 countries. The summit is examining over 70 topics through keynote speakers and major interactive sessions, drawing the participation of world leaders, ministers, decision makers, CEOs, innovators, officials, experts, entrepreneurs, academics, and university students. A number of initiatives, reports and studies are also being issued during the summit and throughout the year. The summit runs from February 8 – 10, 2016 at the Madinat Jumeirah in Dubai.