Boredom is not a problem to be solved. It's the last privilege of a free mind | Gayatri Devi
Lean in to boredom, not your smart phone screen. You'll learn more about yourself and the world around you than you think
Confessing to boredom is confessing to a character-flaw. Popular culture is littered with advice on how to shake it off: find like-minded people, take up a hobby, find a cause and work for it, take up an instrument, read a book, clean your house And certainly don't let your kids be bored: enroll them in swimming, soccer, dance, church groups - anything to keep them from assuaging their boredom by gravitating toward sex and drugs. To do otherwise is to admit that we're not engaging with the world around us. Or that your cellphone has died.
But boredom is not tragic. Properly understood, boredom helps us understand time, and ourselves. Unlike fun or work, boredom is not about anything; it is our encounter with pure time as form and content. With ads and screens and handheld devices ubiquitous, we don't get to have that experience that much anymore. We should teach the young people to feel comfortable with time.
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