It's not just the demands of jobs, chores, and socializing that crowd up our lives. It's the way many of us - myself included - fill up our time with stimulation: window shopping, streaming the latest 'must-see' tv, trawling our Instagram feed. Even standing at a stop light is an opportunity to pull out the phone and Fill. Up. The. Empty. Space.
In her new book, with the tongue-in-cheek title, 'How to be Bored,' Eva Hoffman argues that our constant level of activity has real consequences.
'We can become very disoriented as we move from one activity to another. We become emotionally depleted, paradoxically. We begin to experience not more but less,' she argues. 'We begin to lose our ability to savour experience, to make sense of it, to experience our experience.'
The key to combating that disorientation is downtime. Leisure. 'We need time for reflection, for introspection, for the cultivation of self-knowledge,' she says. Without that time, 'we can lose sight of what our preferences are, what our desires are, but also what our values are.' "
Eva Hoffman, author of the book "How to be Bored" interviewed by Nora Young on CBC Radio's "The Spark":
A Garden in Giverny by Michael Khoury www.fogforestgallery.ca |
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