I visited Keezhadi recently—a quiet village near Madurai, where the ground is giving up secrets that are 2,600 years old. Brick houses, water systems, writing on pottery… all part of a once-thriving civilisation during the Sangam period.
They had trade routes, poetry, tools, and systems. They crossed seas without GPS. Built cities without cement trucks. Passed down knowledge without cloud backups.
It made me wonder—how much have we really gained through “progress”? And what have we lost along the way?
Phones gave us connection on tap. But they took away long, meandering conversations. The kind where you talked just because you had nothing else to do.
Google Maps made life easier. But it also took away the chance encounters—the awkward, hilarious, occasionally helpful conversations with strangers while hunting for that elusive street corner.
The elevator saved our knees. But it also saved us from cardio, eye contact, and the accidental small talk that sometimes brightens a dull day.
Microwaves gave us convenience. But they also gave us uniformly hot but uniformly dull meals. The kind of food that’s warm but somehow lifeless—like a hug from a vending machine.
Air-conditioning gave us comfort. And buildings with sealed windows, where fresh air is just a theory.
Social media gave us reach. But often at the cost of depth.
Even the humble washing machine—blessing that it is—removed a time when people sat together, washing clothes by the river, exchanging gossip, jokes, sometimes wisdom. (It also reduced arm strength.)
I’m not arguing against technology. I’m not packing for a cave just yet.
But here’s the thing: with every upgrade, something old and human quietly exits the frame. Not with a bang, but with a polite shrug—like the friend who left the party without saying goodbye.
We rarely keep track of what we lose.
We almost never count the things that disappear.
What Do We Lose When Everything Gets Easier?
In trying to smoothen every experience, we may have polished off something essential. Friction isn’t always a flaw—it’s often the fingerprint of effort, presence, and care.
The delay before a letter arrived. The clumsy directions from a stranger sitting at the corner tea stall. The slow-cooked meal that made you wait—and talk while waiting. These weren’t bugs. They were features. They made us pause. Pay attention. They made the world—and each other—a little more real.
In our obsession with speed, scale, and seamlessness, maybe it’s time we asked: what’s the value of a little resistance? Of things that take effort, but leave a mark? Of progress that still lets humanity show through?
Friction reminds us that something is being done. That time is being taken. That life is still being lived in full sentences, not just swipes.
Progress is not the enemy. But friction is not always the villain. Sometimes, it’s the only thing standing between us and forgetting what it means to be human.
Keezhadi reminded me: our ancestors were inventive, but not obsessed with convenience. They built thoughtfully. Slowly. With care and friction.
Maybe that’s what made them civilisations worth unearthing.
Food should be cooked slowly, eaten slowly, we grow slowly (even die slowly but it is not noticed so). Same with trees. There is a message for all of us in this way of nature. Ahista, ahista.
Yes. Yes. And Y-E-S. Thank you sir! 🙂
Beautiful!!
Today I am living in a village without AC, washing Machine, Microwave ..I do have wifi rest not most stuff which I find our hyped and trust me mostly they are harmful minus time saving …
More important of village life is community living as compared to the urban and it’s worth learning. We have to continue with every gem of rural life and bring in progress for good of city life..!!! I mean progress in terms of caste world and few other areas …rest rural life rocks ..urban life has messed up itself as material success as everything which is sad.
Great to know. Must chat about it soon! Thank you for sharing.
Beautiful piece Kavi!
Thank you Krishnaraj
Awesome Article Kavi. Took me to my village memories where we need to wait patiently to complete regular activity. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks Preetham. The village was something else. Wasn’t it!
Something to seriously think about…
I am sure something will come from that thinking Ashok. Let me know
Nice blog. keep up the good work.
Wonderful post ,indeed we forgotten the real enjoyment of enjoying small things in life includes buying coffee bytes from corner shop , buying Ice cream from Ice cream bicycle , Saturday Prashad from Temple and Mirchi Bajji from Cart and more in this We have Human experiences includes having a Tea in our corner shop and having hair cut from our known Hair cut saloon from our childhood ,they have a deep connection with us but we lost of all them in the name of Swiggy and other modern ways
another major concern , we are gradually becoming alone and failing to understand the meaning of Happiness in real terms