From Good Manners to Million Emotions: The Evolution of Mumbai’s Vanishing Pause Button
Explore the transformation of Mumbai from the disciplined, slow-paced vision of the 1954 Government of India documentary "Good Manners" to the relentless, high-speed financial capital of today. Featuring insights from Kunal Tripathi’s Mumbai Heritage and influencer Ganesh Vanare, this article examines how the city of dreamers lost its pause button amidst a million emotions in motion.
The documentary opens with the profound statement that a nation's culture is a measure of its maturity, asserting that culture is represented by daily interactions and the treatment of one's surroundings. It presents a series of vignettes illustrating both kindness and rudeness, operating on the principle that consideration for others is a good foundation for society. The film exposes ill-mannered behavior in offices where individuals show no regard for customers or senior citizens. In one frame, a man in a suit and hat is shown sleeping on a train with his feet up on another seat; while the narrator acknowledges that finding a seat during rush hour is a matter of luck, hogging space in such a manner is strictly a matter of poor manners.
Further examples of social transgressions include restaurant etiquette, featuring a man drinking tea from a saucer with slurping sounds, another yawning with an open mouth, and two individuals speaking so loudly they ignore those around them. The video touts making weird throat sounds, spitting in public, grabbing handfuls of chips at parties, and speaking with a mouth full of food as being ill-mannered. Conversely, the film transitions to define good manners through acts of courtesy: a man giving his seat to a woman with an infant, a youth yielding his seat to an elder, and a bus conductor stopping for an elderly woman. The documentary concludes that just as oil keeps industrial wheels running without friction, the wheels of society are kept running smoothly by courtesy and consideration.
While centered on etiquette, the footage emphasizes the slow-paced life inherent in being considerate, teaching a patience that translates not to hasty movements, but to sitting quietly, observing surroundings, or reading. When comparing 1950s Bombay to modern Mumbai, the shift is defined by the pace of life. Influencer Ganesh Vanare recently titled a video of the city as "Not just a city... but a million emotions in motion." Although Mumbai remains known for its good-mannered citizens, the relentless speed of the modern metropolis suggests that the city has somehow lost its pause button,

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