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Gretchen Rubin

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6 Tips for Fighting Boredom

Posted: 10/18/10 10:24 AM ET

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."

One "little thing" that can be a source of unhappiness is being stuck on an activity that's boring. Sitting in traffic. Doing laundry. Waiting in a doctor's office. Listening to your five-year-old tell the story of the dream she had last night.

The more you focus on your boredom, the more you amplify that feeling. Here are six tips to re-frame the moment; even if you can't escape a situation, by re-framing your emotions about it, you can transform it.

1) Put the word "meditation" after the activity that's boring you. (This is my invention.) If you're impatient while waiting for the bus, tell yourself you're doing "bus-waiting meditation." If you're standing in a slow line at the drugstore, you're doing "waiting-in-line meditation." Just saying these words makes me feel very spiritual, high-minded and wise.

2) Dig in. As they say, 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 16, and so on. Eventually you discover that it's not boring at all. If part of my research isn't interesting to me -- like 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.

3) 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.

4) Find an area of refuge. Have a mental escape route planned. Think about something delightful or uplifting (not your to-do list!). Review photos of your kids on your phone (studies show that looking at photos of loved ones provides a big mood boost). Listen to an audiobook.

5) Look for a way to feel grateful. It's a lot better to be bored while waiting in a doctor's office than to be in an agony of suspense about your test results. It's more fun to sit around the breakfast table talking about dreams than to be away from home on a business trip. Maybe the other line at the drugstore is moving even more slowly, etc.

6) Consider: "Am I the boring one?" La Rochefoucauld observed, "We always get bored with those whom we bore." I remind myself of this when I'm having a boring conversation with someone!

What strategies do you use to combat boredom?

I was thrilled to be included as part of this fabulous company: This list of top 10 blogs by women might change your life.

If you like this blog, check out the book The Happiness Project. (Can't resist mentioning, it's a #1 New York Times bestseller.) You can...
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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." One "little thing" that can be a source of unhappin...
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." One "little thing" that can be a source of unhappin...
 
 
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12:53 PM on 10/19/2010
The big question is: How can you do what you love, and make a good living from it? How can you turn your passion into a profession? What is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life? What deserves your sense of humour, your ingenuity, your intelligence and your energy for half your waking life? If you find a job you love, you will never work again ... and you certainly never be bored!

For awesome spiritual and life-affirming posts and cool videos, join me on facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Soul-Therapy/278635488830

http://www.soul-therapy.com

http://blog.soul-therapy.com
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07:51 AM on 10/19/2010
Great article Gretchen, but Buddha came up with # 1 a long time ago and he probably got it from somebody else. Next time my 14 yr old daughter utters "I'm bored", instead of threatening to to have that tatooed on her forehead think I threaten to replace "I'm bored" with your entire article. Thanks.
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crom14
04:52 AM on 10/19/2010
HBO and Showtime ........ the shows they produce are full of insight, humor and entertainment like nothing I have ever enjoyed on tv before. No room for being bored!
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Daniel Haro
10:27 PM on 10/18/2010
im doing huffingtonpost reading/web surfing/ homework/music listening meditation.
its great!
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Trilby
Like candy for dinner.
06:17 PM on 10/18/2010
When I was in grade school, teachers would tell us "There are no boring subjects, only boring people." It doesn't exactly make sense but you get the drift. It annoyed me at the time, but I grew up to be someone who never finds things boring. Like I went through law school and never had a boring class, while others complained almost constantly. If you're bored, find something to do! I was at a bus stop one day when a silly teenager next to me pulled out her phone and called a friend to say "I'm bored." So just because she was bored, her friend and I had to listen to her babblings for the next 10 minutes. --Sorry, that belongs in my cell-phone rant.
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JoeGdr
Texan, Latino, gay, attention-starved Millenial
05:38 PM on 10/18/2010
"The earth is hurtling through space at 100,000 miles per hour. What more do you want?"

- Darlene Connor, "Roseanne"