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Against the ticking clock

by News Desk
12 months ago
in Entertainment, Lifestyle, Top News
Against the ticking clock
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The case for a deliberate life in a tumultuous nation

In a country where speed is synonymous with survival, the very idea of slowing down can sound indulgent. Whether it’s the frenzied refresh of X timelines now that it’s accessible to us without VPNs slowing it down, the incessant pings of WhatsApp groups, or the honking chaos of urban commutes, life in Pakistan is lived on the fast track.

We rush to catch the 9:01 bus, yet delay the most important conversations to “we’ll see tomorrow.” We are a people of paradoxes: intensely reactive, passionately expressive, and yet deeply nostalgic for stillness.

Let’s make one thing clear: this is not a romantic appeal to abandon ambition or retreat from responsibility. We know this because I myself am writing this out of my own sense of urgency to get this across. Nor is it a call to ignore crisis. Rather, it is an argument for reclaiming our time, our attention, and our collective sanity from a culture increasingly dominated by urgency.

The slow living movement, often associated with privileged enclaves in the Global North, has relevance here too, especially in a nation like ours, where political instability, economic precarity, and a digitally accelerated lifestyle collide to breed exhaustion.

The tyranny of time

Multitasking has long been hailed as the holy grail of productivity. But neuroscience tells a different story. Juggling multiple tasks doesn’t boost efficiency, it chips away at it. When the brain is forced to rapidly switch contexts, cognitive performance tanks, attention spans shrink, memory fades, and naturally, stress builds.

Add burnout to this mix, and the picture gets bleaker. No longer just a corporate buzzword, burnout has become a cultural crisis. The World Health Organisation classifies it as an “occupational phenomenon” caused by chronic workplace stress.

According to Deloitte’s 2023 Global Survey, over 52 per cent of Gen Zs and nearly half of millennials worldwide report feeling burnt out. In Pakistan, where precarious employment, overwork, and minimal mental health infrastructure are the norm, that number likely skews even higher. We are, collectively, exhausted.

But even when we’re off the clock, we don’t slow down, we just switch gears. We chase micro-pleasures at warp speed. One reel becomes ten. One tweet leads to a thread. Our leisure, too, has been hijacked by the algorithm. And unsurprisingly, anxiety has become the background noise of modern life. According to the WHO, one in seven adolescents (aged 10-19) worldwide experiences a mental disorder, with anxiety and depression driving the surge.

In Pakistan, this digital deluge is impossible to ignore. DataReportal’s 2025 Digital Report shows that 66.9 million Pakistanis, over a quarter of the population, are active social media users. On average, they spend nearly 3.5 hours daily on social platforms. And with X recently unbanned, yet another scroll hole has reopened, ready to vacuum up our attention and feed our dopamine cravings.

How to slow down

Speed is woven into Pakistan’s cultural fabric. The phrase “jaldi karo” is an ethos. From weddings to WhatsApp replies, everything must happen now, and faster, because delays are met with irritation, queues provoke rebellion, and slowness is mistaken for incompetence.

Our infrastructure reflects this ethos. Karachi’s traffic is a daily war we wage with and against acceleration and aggression, internet bundles expire faster than chai cools, the news cycle is relentless, breaking faster than it can be processed. We don’t just consume information; we devour it and then we hit refresh.

But speed has costs. It makes us reactive instead of reflective. It incentivises output over quality, performance over well-being. It alienates us from our bodies, our histories, and from one another.

Yet, within our own cultural practices lie the very tools for slowness. Consider the patience of a slow-cooked nihari, simmering for hours to reach perfection. Or the communal rhythm of a dastarkhwan, where meals stretch into stories. Think of truck art, not painted in haste but laboured over in devotion. Think of the afternoon siesta (the venerable “qailula”), a centuries-old practice now swallowed by workaholic hustle culture. Slow living is not alien to Pakistan; it is simply under threat.

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