Jirh

Fascinated by boredom

6 posts in this topic

As children, we don’t inherently know what “boredom” means. A rock, a shadow, a repeating sound—these are endlessly fascinating things by sheer existence. What are they anyway?!

Then comes peer pressure: somewhere around preschool, a friend or someone of “higher authority” sighs loudly and announces: “This is boring 😑”. The group nods. Suddenly, our own stillness feels shameful. Not only is this experience labelled “boring”, but somehow, magically even, boring becomes bad.

We learn that uninterrupted attention is a social mistake. We learn that constant stimulation equals joy and excitement. We label and judge flat experiences to be unworthy of experiencing. We learn to flee and run away from thinking about staying still. To fit in, we perform boredom—slumping shoulders, heavy sighs, a desperate scan for stimulation.

The illusion? That boredom exists outside us, in the world. In truth, it’s a shared agreement: We’ve decided this moment has no value.

By adolescence, the reflex is automatic. Sitting quietly becomes intolerable—not because nothing is happening, but because we’ve forgotten how to witness without judgment. Boredom isn’t the absence of stimulus. It’s the fear of being left out of a more interesting story.

It's incredibly fascinating how all of that is even possible even though at first thought it would seem almost impossible! Like we are literally living in wonderland, and how we forget is part of the wonder!

Cheers!

Edited by Jirh

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This is a beautiful post. I have learned that boredom is about experiencing nothingness. Nothingness is the fertile soil from which our imagination can go wild, from which great creative ideas are emerged. 


Just because you have these psychic powers and abilities, it doesn't mean you're any less of a human than anyone else. There are people who are fast, people who are book smart and people with strong body odor. Psychic powers are just like that. -Reigen, Mob Psycho 100

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Boredom is the belief: something is missing, something is lacking, let something here be different.

Peace is the recognition: nothing is missing, nothing is lacking, let everything here be as it is.

The shift is this: I no longer take myself to be someone in lack. I withdraw this meaning I myself added.

I chased excitement for so long that lack became the default. But it was something I always brought to the table.

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Was this written by AI?

But yes, definitely, embrace some degree of boredom once in a while. That's the direction nobody wants to look - of painful crudity and dreary living. This 'dreary' sentiment may underlie our resistance to monotony and boredom.

Edited by UnbornTao

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8 hours ago, UnbornTao said:

Was this written by AI?

Enhanced.

Good instincts :D

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Technology and luxurious lifestyle play a huge role in this as much as social conditions and upbringing. 
One reason we feel boredom is that we are not sufficiently occupied …or there isn’t much going on in our lives to put it as it is. If you lived in nature and had to hunt for your food every day ..you likely wouldn’t experience as much boredom. There would be little room for it, because you would instead be dealing with a more intense emotion like stress. You don’t feel bored when you are stressed right ?

in practical terms one possible solution to boredom is to take on a demanding or tiring job. Or purposely creating more challenging lifestyle for yourself  .

 


 "When you get very serious about truth you accept your life situation exactly as it is. So much so that you aren't childishly sitting around wishing it were otherwise.If you were confined to a wheelchair you would just accept it as how reality is. Just as you now just accept that you are not a bird who can fly."

-Leo Gura. 

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