6 Tips for Coping with Boredom
Gretchen Rubin
6x NYT Bestselling Author | Host of the "Happier with Gretchen Rubin" Podcast | Order "Life in Five Senses," out now in paperback
Samuel Johnson wrote, “It is by studying little things that we attain the great art of having as little misery, and as much happiness as possible.” Little things make us happy, and little things can drag us down.
One “little thing” that can be a source of unhappiness is boredom. Sitting in traffic. Doing laundry. Waiting in a long line at the grocery store.
I’ve found that the more I focus on my boredom or irritation, the more I amplify that feeling. Here are six strategies I use to “re-frame” the moment; even if I can’t escape a situation, by re-framing my emotions about it, I can transform it.
– Put the word “meditation” after the activity that’s boring you. (This is my invention.) If you’re standing in a slow line at the drugstore, you’re doing “Waiting in line meditation.” If you’re cleaning up after a party, you’re doing “Cleaning meditation.” Just saying these words makes me feel very spiritual and high-minded and wise.
-– If you can't get out of it, get into it. Diane Arbus wrote, “The Chinese have a theory that you pass through boredom into fascination and I think it’s true.” If something is boring for two minutes, do it for four minutes. If it’s still boring, do it for eight minutes, then sixteen, and so on. Eventually you discover that it’s not boring at all. In my life, I’ve found that if part of my research isn’t interesting to me — for example, studying the Dardanelles campaign for Forty Ways to Look at Winston Churchill — I read a whole book about it, and then it becomes absorbing. The same principle holds when doing boring or irritating tasks, like washing dishes.
– Take the perspective of a journalist or scientist. Really study what’s around you. What are people wearing, what do the interiors of buildings look like, what noises do you hear? If you bring your analytical powers to bear, you can make almost anything interesting.
– Find an area of refuge. Have a mental escape route planned. Think about something delightful or uplifting (not your to-do list!). Or maybe review photos of your kids on your phone; studies show that looking at photos of loved ones provides a big mood boost.
– Take your time. I realize that when information bores me, like trying to understand a change-of-service notice from the cable company, I try to rush through it. This makes things worse, though, not better, because I feel not only bored, but also impatient and confused. Now, when I have to make sense of something that’s both boring and bewildering, I deliberately slow myself down and take all the time I need. My resolution to Put myself in jail is helpful.
– Most important: always have something good to read!
How about you? Have you found strategies to deal with boredom?
You can read more about this in Happier at Home, chapter six, about "Time."
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Are you reading Happier at Home or The Happiness Project in a book group? Email me if you'd like the one-page discussion guide. Or if you're reading it in a spirituality book club, a Bible study group, or the like, email me for the spirituality one-page discussion guide.
(Photo: Margiebean, Flickr)
Inventing what the world dearly needs
11 年Bored? If I live to be 1000, I could never do even 10% of what I want to do. Sitting in traffic or waiting in a long line at the grocery store? Invent while you wait. Doing laundry? Invent a better way to do it. In medical school, I serendipitously found a way to address the root cause of boredom, and I later discovered several ways to augment happiness, all ultimately based on neurophysiology (not pharmaceuticals, BTW). Thus, boredom and unhappiness have antidotes.
Retired
11 年I'm very impressed with your blogs Gretchen. So true!
Hospital & Health Care Professional
11 年https://sites.google.com/site/disneyworldvacationrental/
French to English translations
11 年{PB: A bunch of robots repeating ad nauseam the same patterns everyday...} A word of caution: Most of these comments are so introverted as not to be at all funny. You are not and never will be the center of the universe. If you are bored, it is probably because you think you are. You are one little cog in a giant wheel and your fortune in life (and this means luck not wealth) depends upon a great many other people who are sharing with you this present existence. Reach out to them, you will find a wealth of distraction waiting for you. Life is not just about YOU. It is, rather, about US. No man is an island, Entire of itself. Each is a piece of the continent, A part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less. As well as if a promontory were. As well as if a manor of thine own Or of thine friend's were. Each man's death diminishes me, For I am involved in mankind. Therefore, send not to know For whom the bell tolls, It tolls for thee. John Donne
Deputy Training Manager at Kwantas Corporation Berhad
11 年When boredom strikes us it just meant that our mind craves for something more challenging or more interesting things to do. Do you notice that feeling bored does not only happen when we have” nothing to do” but including when we’re busy doing something ? That “something” may not be very interesting or challenging enough to our brain that’s why boredom attacks us. Like what Pascal B. had said, writers, scientists and analysts make use of boredom to inspire them. It boosts their energy to be more creative than ever. Having said this, you need not worry about being bored. Just make use of it in a creative way. Turn negative perception of boredom into positive adventure by exploring new ideas, thinking out of the box, explore things that are more challenging or meet people that you feel interesting. Enjoy being bored !!!