They haven't yet learned to appreciate/enjoy subtleties, simple pleasures and a wider range of interests. — Terrapin Station
I agree it seems to be a first world problem. — Terrapin Station
On what evidence? — Barry Etheridge
If this is true, that boredom is a baseline experience for humans, then what does that say about the nature of being and existence itself? — schopenhauer1
I disagree that boredom is a baseline experience for humans. The baseline is "rest", unstressed quiet. There are many states of excitation, one of which is boredom. "Being bored" isn't being at rest -- its being irritated, stressed, oppressed, with monotony. Boredom isn't "at rest" -- it's a stress that seeks release. You've been at work, doing some fucking dull pointless activity all day, and are bored out of your mind. That is not a baseline status.
What it says about being and existence is that life is a mixed bag: some pleasure, some suffering--usually not in the preferred combination. In other words, live is a bitch and then we die. — Bitter Crank
Yes, that is true. You have to do something in your unstressed quiet time. Read something. Watch something. Learn something. Talk with someone. Play chess. Write on TPF. etc. If you don't do anything in your unstressed quiet time and just sit in a chair doing nothing, of course you'll become bored. I have an acquaintance who literarily sits in a chair, smokes weed everyday, and plays video games. Doesn't even go out of the house. He lives with his brother. His brother works, pays the rent and buys the food. He doesn't do anything. He always complains that he's bored. Of course! How can he not be... he's not doing anything, not challenging himself, not focusing his efforts on doing something worthwhile.Unstressed quiet, done long enough, leads to boredom. — schopenhauer1
>:O You must be like some damn lion lying in indolence and inertia doing nothing. But common - how can one be interested just in themselves without ever desiring (not needing, but desiring) something external? That's like not even being in the world. You're saying that you could just lie on the couch and do literarily nothing day after day, except of course the necessary things like hygiene, food, etc. That seems to be a lie to me.I've never had much sympathy with this position, because I don't really get bored. I like long stretches of indolence and inertia, and if anything disliked being forced into activity. Boredom means, in a way, that you are not interesting, because something external must stimulate you to make living worthwhile for you. True interest comes from within, nowhere else. — The Great Whatever
Your claim that you do so and not get bored I find unlikely to be true. That guy does nothing and DOES get bored. There's a difference there.I don't understand how you think my claim can be a lie, and then attest that it's true for someone you know. Not sure what you're trying to say. — The Great Whatever
I have an acquaintance who literarily sits in a chair, smokes weed everyday, and plays video games. Doesn't even go out of the house. He lives with his brother. His brother works, pays the rent and buys the food. He doesn't do anything. He always complains that he's bored. Of course! How can he not be... he's not doing anything, not challenging himself, not focusing his efforts on doing something worthwhile. — Agustino
Your claim that you do so and not get bored I find unlikely to be true. That guy does nothing and DOES get bored. There's a difference there. — Agustino
I doubt that in your long periods of inertia you actually do nothing. You don't play, you don't study, etc. So I'm just inquiring what it is that you actually mean by long periods of inertia - what does that actually and practically mean? — Agustino
Ok thanks for that. See I take that as activity. I myself engage in that kind of activity; it's called the activity of thinking and it's good you're doing that, at least you're using your God-given head, most folks just let it rot or treat it like an unnecessary appendix to be entirely honest with you >:OI never said I did nothing, I said I had long periods of indolence and inertia. This also fits with the OP, which mentioned 'when the usual concerns and goals of daily life are exhausted.' But yeah, I can go a long time browsing the internet aimlessly, reading, studying, or just lying down and not thinking about much. I always have things to think about. — The Great Whatever
There is nothing in this world that is not naturally occurring to this world. I'll even go one further, and say there is nothing in this world that is truly unnatural, as only things which can naturally occur in this world, occur. Humans building cites, making money, driving cars and typing on computers is every bit as natural as a river flowing down the mountain. — Jeremiah
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