Arshad came out of his room angrily, slamming the door behind him. He glared at his siblings who were watching television and yelled at them, “Can’t you people turn down the volume? How can I study when you all are creating such a din?”
Daddy, who was trying to read a book despite the disturbance, looked up at his eldest with a thoughtful look, “Son, you know very well that your mother has gone to bed with a splitting headache. You are complaining about the high volume of the television, but do you realise how you must have disturbed Mummy by slamming the door and shouting at the top of your voice? Please learn to practice what you preach.”
practice what you preach.”
My friends, please do not feel that I am accusing you, but I feel that somehow our young generation has lost the sense of what should be the volume of their voice according to the demands of different situations, particularly when you are interacting with elderly people. Let me explain with examples so that the message I am trying to convey gets through!
Suppose you have gone to visit an ailing relative or a friend. If you speak in a loud tone and keep on talking unnecessarily, you will prove to be a nuisance to the sick person and cause discomfort to him. This, you must realise is definitely not the purpose of your visit. If you enquire softly about, how the sick person is feeling and utter a few reassuring words, your visit will become a source of pleasure for him.
In the same way, when you make noise in a mosque or any other place of worship, you are showing disrespect to the sanctity of the place. Without realising your fault, you are destroying the peace of those who are praying, supplicating or reading the Holy Scripture. You are bound to be reprimanded or the people in these places may complain to the elder who is accompanying you and cause him embarrassment at your rowdiness.
People who live in small houses or apartments often come to parks to have a breath of fresh air or to relax in the greenery. It is definitely your right to play in the park and it is natural for children to be noisy while playing a game. But here one should take care to stay away from those who want some quiet moments and are sitting on a bench or talking a leisurely walk. A section of the park can always be found where one can play freely without disturbing the peace of other visitors and the serenity of the park.
In schools, as soon as a teacher walks out of a class, a hubbub is created by students. In the short interval between two periods, students often start talking loudly or cracking jokes, instead of preparing for the next period. A loud bang on the table by the incoming teacher or simply a glare by a strict professor, immediately changes this din into pin drop silence.
It should be understand that a classroom is not a place to talk loudly with friends. Instead of making an unnecessary din, students should value every moment of their school time. Shouting and laughing can wait till the lunch break or when the school hours are over.
At times, without realising it, children hurt the feelings of their elders by their noisiness. A grandmother who prefers to remain anonymous says, “As a young girl, a basic lesson my parents taught me was to be quite when an elder person entered the room or when grown-ups were in a discussion. Volumes of radios or the television were instantly turned down and we greeted the entering person politely.”