The Art of Doing Nothing

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Drive

You’re here and you might be wondering why you’re here. And you may also be wondering why I would focus on a topic such as doing nothing or embracing boredom during a time when everything is about ‘experiences‘.  *barf*

All I can say is try it. Regardless of what you do for a living, the act of mindlessness can unlock new ways of thinking. Rewire your pathways. Give you new insight. Or simply make you feel good. It’s my secret weapon to solving complex problems and coming up with ideas.

This website is an exploration of this very idea and is an archive of things that are inspiring or intriguing.

If all you do is get lost in the above GIFs, I will feel like I’ve accomplished something.

Let’s get bored together.

 

 

 

The Art & Science of Being Bored

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The idea of doing nothing and the premise of this website, like all good things, is supported by research. But first, join me while I go down memory lane to the true inspiration for my website, my childhood.

I grew up during the 90s, a magical time without social media, limited internet, no cable (I now thank my parents for this), and a backyard that consisted of 40 acres of fields and woods. Weekends would roll around and I would inevitably moan to my parents: “I’m booooooored.” Rolling around on the ground like a piece of wet spaghetti.

Every kid says this or at least they did when I was growing up. But unlike other kids, I didn’t have MTV to turn to. My parents would always say: “Go outside and use your imagination.” *eye role* What a cop out. They are just trying to get rid of me.

Wow, was I ever wrong.

The ‘bored’ times I spent wandering in the woods is what made me who I am today.  Hours spent exploring every inch of those 40 acres without a plan, without friends, set my imagination on fire.

A fallen over tree with termite holes became a ladder and a lookout for what would become a made up classroom. Luckily for me a school shut down at the end of our street and I scored an old desk. It’s still there to this day.

An empty fox or coyote hole filled with me fear (where are they?) but also led me to imagine those woods as a Beatrix Potter-esque world.

I could go on. Point is, the ideas and fantasies I made up were endless and emerged because my mind was clear and I was incredibly bored.  This is what the Italians call La Dolce Far Niente or the sweetness of doing nothing. Not a new concept, just rarely practiced or celebrated.

I’m on a mission to change that.

Image Source: Sadly, cannot remember.

Lightmapping…

A special light painting tool displays radiation levels in real-time at the gates of a ruined church in Starye Bobovichi, Russia.  Here white light shows contamination levels up to 0.23uSv/h, while orange highlights elevated levels – from 0.50uSv/h to 0.85uSv/h around the gates.  30 years after the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster, the schoolyard still contains areas of elevated radiation levels.
A special light painting tool displays radiation levels in real-time at the gates of a ruined church in Starye Bobovichi, Russia.
Here white light shows contamination levels up to 0.23uSv/h, while orange highlights elevated levels – from 0.50uSv/h to 0.85uSv/h around the gates.
30 years after the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster, the schoolyard still contains areas of elevated radiation levels.

This is incredibly useful and absolutely stunning…

Photographer Greg McNevin overlaid measurement graphs on images to visualize the amount of radioactivity in Chernobyl.

This is a perfect example of the power of data visualization. It makes complex things visible. This has so many uses for other parts of the world and situations (gas leaks).

Can’t wait to see what he does next.