Thursday, August 11, 2005

A second chance to make a first impression

There is an innate charm in joining a new school or college. It's more than just the excitement of being in a new place or the opportunity to make new friends. I can best sum it up as getting a second chance at making a first impression.

All of us are in the habit of constantly judging people. It is a very human tendency to observe all these small details about the appearance and behaviour of other people and think about how much he/she appeals to you as a person, and as a friend. Everybody has a few personal favourites with respect to the traits we look for, but certainly there are some broad characteristics as well. For example, a heavy Indian accent like "Hai yevrybaudy, hai jaambie. You yenjayed yuvarself today-aa?" is a definite put-off for most of us.

And being intelligent (!) human beings, we are all bothered that other people are judging us as well. Hence we observe people, talk, take mental notes, and constantly try to improve ourselves. There is nothing vain or petty or selfish about making these little changes for sake of being liked better by our fellow human beings. We all want to be better people, more trustworthy, more virtuous, more dilligent and hard-working. Hand-in-hand with these things are the things that make a good impression on other people, such as being more athletic or sophisticated. Ultimately, they all contribute to becoming a better person, and feeling better about oneself, apart from getting other people to like you better.

The problem, of course, is that people have long memories. You may have changed from a pukka sambhar sadam - thair sadam eating Brahmin to a connoisseur of Chinese, Mexican, Italian, Lebanese, Greek, Thai and Continental cuisines but apart from your close friends people will not have noticed.

That was just an example, of course, and I'm not actually saying that people give a damn about your culinary tastes. My point is just that the first impression is the lasting impression. That is why there is a certain allure to going to a new place to live or study. You may have been a complete geek and a dork in your past life; you may have been a failure at studies; you may have been a wimpy loser; but you now have a chance to truly leave all that behind.

The only catch is that it takes a lot of work to be the new you. Few people actually manage to accomplish the change that they swore to bring about.

That said, I'd like to point out the price of making this change.

All things in life are connected. It may be one or a hundred degrees of separation, but ultimately every aspect, every characteristic, every attribute of you is intertwined. You will not realize it at the beginning, but when you change one thing about yourself, you are subtly changing something else. Perhaps something that you did not want to be changed. If you managed to change from a bookworm to a "cool" sports-playing movie-watching swimming-trekking guy, don't be surprised if you find your grades dropping. If you work hard at your written and spoken english, don't be surprised if your home appears too small for you when you go back. If you wanted to get rid of your shyness and improve your skills at interacting with the opposite sex, don't be surprised if the people you always considered your close friends seem to be drifting away from you.

Life is never easy. One can never fully weigh all possibilities and decide upon a course of action without some degree of doubt. After choosing the course of action, accomplishing it is a hundred times harder than choosing it. Smile and take it one step at a time, and hope that it will all turn out for the best.

Cheers,
Prashanth.

12 comments:

Sundeep said...

yeah zombie. i agree that a conscious effort to change some aspect of oneself always has some unintended effects in other directions. Still, such changes are often imperative and one has to go ahead with them.

btw, bon voyage!!

Vc said...

SPeeeeeeeeeee.. you'r back ? ( che there goes my plan of giving this blog out for rent)


While reading this post I thought you would have written a few tidbits on how you had made a "good impression" on your classmates... che ... ok prammmise to write about that hmm hmm incident.. areh the time where you helped this lady with her books and it turns out she's your teacher...Holy Cow.. just realised.. you are still a kid, going to college with your tiffin box and water bottle...*sigh

Kirthi said...

Welcome back SP (It wasn't a long time back that u left was it?).
All the same it is a new country u are typing this from!
In a way I agree that most people believe that first impressions are lasting ones. But I have to say that if someone is altering the image that he is projecting it has to be a continuous effort because you can't fool people all the time by 'cloaking' the real u. If u are a thair-saddam guy and like it that way why feel ashamed to be associated with it .(u seem to have a very strange distaste for the chammathu thayir saddam eating brahm :P!!). What I mean to say is that the change u make in urself should be a self-driven act and because an improvement is essential not a peer and atmosphere driven one simply because the latter is going to be a fleeting change that people might see. There is nothing wrong with doing in Rome as the Romans do but there is no need to become a Julius Caesar there!

Prashanth said...

Su,
I am already in State College, PA! Gimme a mail after you reach Notre Dame.

Vc,
What hmm hmm incident??!!

Kirthi,
I think you have misread my basic premise. Actually I don't blame you because I keep assuming that the readers know me well, and understand that I do not support hypocrisy in any form.

In any case, I am not talking about "cloaking" the real you but actually CHANGING yourself more or less permanently.

Importantly, by saying that we all want to change in such a way that people will like us better, you must understand that I do not include things that you personally find distasteful or phoney in a Salinger-ish way. And I place more emphasis on the idea that one gets the chance to fully leave the past behind when one goes to a new place. There could have been several ways in which you wanted to change yourself... improvement, as defined by your own self. Yet it is not easy to make those changes with albatrosses hanging around your neck, and the complacency wrought by familiarity and the daily rigmarole of your old life.

Anonymous said...

.... so begins your "transplantation" with introspective rooting & epistemological branching! Its nice to see someone so open to the idea of transformation: some assimilation, some conformity, some skepticism, some defiance, some independence, some interdependence and we grow ...

Not that you woudnt have thought about it, still if I may suggest ... just notice how your "views" on Americans as well as Indians change. Sometimes the best perspective n perception comes from a distance: remember the story of 6 blind men and an elephant!! When we limit our frame of reference, we start hobbling... and here's yr new opportunity to explore, to discover, to think, to imagine, to create, to transform....

Zealous not a Zealot:
*Intern

Kirthi said...

Hmm that made more sense now. What read on ur post did not give the complete picture though!
I guess Vc and u can start new business on Hoh's blog. But I guess u won't be selling thair saddam or onion dosas there..pity!

Anonymous said...

... in a lighter vein...

* A HEURISTIC APPROACH *

In a drastically altered milieu; the challenges of change comes not from outside but from WITHIN: the "deprogramming" of what becomes a part of our mental process n our "inner-voices" which can be uncomfortably judgemental...

I assume that yr primary focus willbe studies; but even geeks burnout; so occasional "dating" is a good way to unwind-n-rewind ...
The traps begin...

- Preference for "Indian" Gals; instinctive likeness to familiarity... The Status-Quo Trap

- The first dating experience having disproportionately high weightage on subsequent choices - The Anchorage Trap

- Punishment of commission ( doing somethin ... ) far outweighs the sins of omission ( doing nothing) -- The Avoidance Trap

So our subconsious decision-making is always at play ... the biggest hurdle of change lies within ...

*Intern

Prashanth said...

Golly Intern... that's a seriously weird perspective on dating... hope you weren't serious!! In any case I don't need advice on dating (thats my male ego speaking)

Anonymous said...

Golly Prashanth...
I'm sure you didnt miss the first line.. "in a lighter vain"...

But what I really wanted to say was the very "first" para ...that ...
... in changing self, an entirely changed milieu is a good head-start; but then the challenges comes from WITHIN: in form of 'programmed' mental-responses n 'conditioned' voices within: both a legacy of our past experiences!

Some traps are in forms of:
- comfort in familiarity (Status-quo Trap)
- disproportionate weightage to initial experiences (Anchorage Trap)
- Omission being more attractive than commission( Avoidance Trap)

The "example" of dating just for the laughs ...
Should I add : The Ego Trap??
My my ... you sure are gonna miss out when gals ask you for date ...(with that male-ego cap on - *just teasing*)

Lemme add:
I truly respect you n your EGO ...
(Guess you would gather that; in sooo many of my posts here)
but rather than pampering your ego,
I'll poke it every now n then ...

Enjoying Ruffling Feathers ...
*Intern

btw .. my perspective on dating (n most social institutions) is much more wierd ...

Anonymous said...

you better get back here soon

Anonymous said...

Hey was the last anon ur mom? no? ur aunt? no? ur bro? no? 'her'? no?
Heck I'll stop speculating now, let's have more dating tips from *intern instead!
--kk

Anonymous said...

Wait till I tell your granny....