When I was growing up in Chittagong, Bangladesh, many people traveled by rickshaw, including my father. Like my grandfather, my father had a profound influence on me too. He taught me many life lessons, most of which focused on thoughtfulness.
Every time my father traveled in a rickshaw, when the puller came up to a hill my father would exit the rickshaw and walked with the rickshaw puller. We lived in a hilly part of the country so this was not an uncommon occurrence but I was perplexed by my father’s actions because he was paying the puller money to ride in the rickshaw in the first place.
Why would he then get out during the most difficult part of the journey uphill?
Here is what he told me.
It is very difficult for the rickshaw puller to climb the hill. Simple, but profound and a perfect example of what it means to be competitive.
My father knew it was the right thing to do.
My father’s words stuck with me. When I was older, I did the same thing. Whenever I was riding in a rickshaw and we encountered a hill or difficult terrain, I would exit the vehicle and walk alongside with the puller. Most people would not give rickshaw pullers the time of day, much less go out of their way to acknowledge and empathize with them.
Inspired by my father, I used walking alongside with the pullers as an opportunity to ask them about their own lives, their families, their hopes and dreams. I used our time together as an opportunity to encourage and inspire them and shared stories about my father and how my father inspired me.
I even visited some of the rickshaw pullers in their homes and wrote a newspaper article about my experience and what I learned from the pullers.
I can’t say that I thought to myself, “Hey Subir, you need to show empathy towards those pullers.” It was simply the right thing to do and it was good enough for my father, it was good enough for me.
True empathy requires no effort. It is simply in nature part of who you are.
One of the world’s pre-eminent experts on quality and process improvements, Subir Chowdhury is the #1 international bestselling author on SIX SIGMA philosophy. Hailed by The New York Times as a “leading Quality expert,” and by Business Week as “the Quality Prophet”, he is the author of 15 books. His latest book THE DIFFERENCE: When Good Enough Isn’t Enough (Crown Business, 2017) made it to the USA Today Bestseller list as well as National Bestseller in India. In 2017, India’s prestigious Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kharagpur established the ‘Subir Chowdhury School of Quality and Reliability’ – the first of its kind in Asia. He is the Chairman and CEO of ASI Consulting Group and helped his clients save billions of dollars.