Monday, March 21, 2011

Money is yours but resources belong to the society

Germany is a highly industrialised country. It produces top brands like Benz, BMW, Siemens etc. The nuclear reactor pump is made in a small town in this country.
In such a country, many will think its people lead a luxurious life.

At least that was my impression before my study trip.     
                                                                            
When I arrived at Hamburg, my colleagues who work in Hamburg arranged a welcome party for me in a restaurant.
As we walked into the restaurant, we noticed that a lot of tables were empty. There was a table where a young  couple was having their meal. There were only two dishes and two cans of  beer on the table. I wondered if such simple meal could be romantic, and  whether the girl will leave this stingy guy.                             
                                                                            
There were a few old ladies on another table. When a dish is served, the waiter would distribute the food for them, and they would finish every bit of the food on their plates.                                             
                                                                            
We did not pay much attention to them, as we were looking forward to the dishes we ordered. As we were hungry, our local colleague ordered more food for us.                                                            
As the restaurant was quiet, the food came quite fast. Since there were other activities arranged for us, we did not spend much time dining. When we left, there was still about one third of unconsumed food on the table.
                                                                           
 
When we were leaving the restaurant, we heard someone calling us. We noticed the old ladies in the restaurant were talking about us to the restaurant owner. When they spoke to us in English, we understood that they were unhappy about us wasting so much food. We immediately felt that  they were really being too busybody.
                                      "We paid for our food, it is none of your business how much food we left behind," my colleague Gui told the old ladies.                   
The old ladies were furious. One of them immediately took her hand phone out and made a call to someone. After a while, a man in uniform claimed to be an officer from the Social Security organisation arrived. Upon knowing  what the dispute was, he issued us a 50 Mark fine.                        

We all kept quiet. The local colleague took out a 50 Mark note and repeatedly apologized to the officer.                                   
 

The officer told us in a stern voice, "ORDER WHAT YOU CAN CONSUME, MONEY IS YOURS BUT RESOURCES BELONG TO THE SOCIETY. THERE ARE MANY OTHERS IN THE WORLD WHO ARE FACING SHORTAGE OF RESOURCES. YOU HAVE  NO REASON TO WASTE RESOURCES.´”                   
                                                 
Our face turned red. We all agreed with him in our hearts. The mindset of  people of this rich country put all of us to shame. WE REALLY NEED TO REFLECT ON THIS.
 
We are from  country which is not very rich in resources. To save face, we order large quantity and also waste food when we give others a treat.
 
THIS LESSON TAUGHT US A LESSON TO THINK SERIOUSLY ABOUT CHANGING OUR BAD HABITS.                                                 
My colleague photostatted the fine ticket and gave a copy to each of us as  a souvenir. All of us kept it and pasted on our wall to remind us that we shall never be wasteful.
- Maj Gen Pushpendra Singh    
 
When someone shares something of value with you and you benefit from it, you have a moral obligation to share it with others
 
Disclaimer - I felt sharing this will help our society even if one person reads and implements.

2 comments:

  1. It is quite common scene of wasting food when we go out for lunch or dinner. We should have such system in our country...till then lets make it a practice to follow.

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  2. "Money is yours but the resources belong to the society." Beautiful thought!

    I have a tiffin service serving around half of Bangalore where we deliver food to people at their homes / offices. Numerous people tell us to pack extra (even though I can confidently say that one meal is more than enough for even 2 people). When queried, they simply say that they will pay extra...."maximum it will go waste..so what?". My kitchen throws out almost 5-7 Kgs of cooked food leftover from boxes which come back from our customers daily.

    How do you change the mindsets of people? Any thoughts?

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