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Boredom
By Hans Zeiger
The
other night, while I watched lightning dance wildly among the clouds
over Montana's Little Bitterroot Lake, a young man informed me that
he was bored. His was an unjust boredom, I replied. Never have we
had so many things to do and witness and ponder, and never have
we been so bored.
Boredom
is relative. One can find great joy and fulfillment in a long afternoon
of porch sitting. One can be bored at the task of skydiving or rock
climbing. It's what is in the mind that counts.
July
was National Anti-Boredom Month. It is a worthy war, but we tend
to make matters worse when we set out to solve boredom. An example
of this failure is the internet, which seeks to satiate the bored
and idle amongst us. GotBoredom.com and Bored.com feature links
to games and pictures and movies. CollegeBoredom.com is "helping
fight the war against boredom" by publishing "random"
quotes, "random" Instant Message away messages, and other
randomness. The Boredom Network includes websites dedicated to High
School Boredom, Work Boredom, Boredom Ville, Boredom Games, The
Boredom Times, and Bored Sh**less.
One
might suppose that all of the technology and all of the information
and all of the busyness and all of the opportunities of our age
would preclude boredom. In fact it promotes boredom.
Our
society tells us that we need stuff to do, but sometimes we do so
much stuff and have so much stuff that we don't have any time to
think about all the important stuff. It is quite possible that the
busiest man alive is the most bored man.
Throwing
more activities at the problem is not the solution. The solution
is less busyness and less clutter. For it has become difficult to
see the simple, lasting things for all the bright and gaudy things.
We have forgotten that the things of the spirit, and in our vain
attempt to celebrate the things of the flesh, we miss out on what
is truly exciting and exhilarating.
Take
my hometown, Puyallup, Washington. It's home of the nation's fifth
largest Fair and year-round activities at the Western Washington
Fairgrounds. A river cuts through the valley, there's dozens of
parks for recreation, nearby lakes and a creek system. There's a
gigantic mall on the South Hill, thousands of youth work opportunities
and hundreds of choices of after-school activities, sports, and
clubs. Seattle and Tacoma are nearby, Mount Rainier looms over the
city, the Puyallup River empties into the vast waters of the Puget
Sound. And there are the things common to anyplace, USA: television,
internet, radio, books, movies, cars, art, music, food, schools,
churches, people.
"Puyallup
can be fun, but it can be boring," a 13-year old girl told
the Seattle Times recently regarding my hometown. Puyallup's skating
rink asks on it's website, "Too boring? Come inside to play!"
A report about the quality of life for youth in my town reveals,
"Many of the teenage youth described feeling bored."
Boredom
is not about circumstances; it is about how we misjudge our circumstances.
Boredom is not the consequence of an event; it is a depraved state
of mind.
"Mankind
can endure anything but boredom," warned Russell Kirk, noting
that late Rome, like modern America, was bored. By the Fourth Century,
the Roman Empire had become "an empire in which many felt that
life no longer was worth living."
Life
is not worth living when we forget that we are dying. Only when
we know that we are dying can we live, and only when we know that
we are spiritually dead can we live eternally. But we blindly assume
ourselves to be alive, we surround ourselves with things to see
and hear and do, we forget God, and so we make life not worth living.
Boredom
is borne of sloth, the seventh deadly sin. Men and nations fall
from that sin, says Solomon. "The hand of the diligent will
rule, but the lazy man will be put to forced labor."
There's
still a lot of hard work out there, but hard work without meaning
can be great folly. Mothers, farmers, teachers, priests, soldiers
and builders - these are worthy occupations. Traders and gamblers,
bureaucrats and bums, internet merchants and porn shop workers -
these lack the intrinsic value of the first list.
A plethora
of non-essential jobs indicate that economic prosperity is on the
rise, but in a spiritual sense, our poverty is deep. We live for
the flesh, but the flesh does not satisfy, so we live for the next
flesh. It's at 5:00, or it's on the weekend, or it's on the next
vacation.
Our
needs are met, so we work for leisure. It doesn't always occur to
us that work should be a fulfilling and dignifying endeavor, like
life itself.
Boredom
is of no advantage to those of us who seek the renewal of our civilization.
Boredom is the evil that opposes the command of Paul to "redeem
the time, because the days are evil." As Jesus taught, we must
work "while it is day; the night is coming when no one can
work."
Hans
Zeiger is a student at Hillsdale College and president of the Scout
Honor Coalition. www.hanszeiger.com
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