If the current state of the world has you scared, angry or sad, I聽can鈥檛 help. But if you鈥檙e bored 鈥 and it鈥檚 hard to imagine that boredom is not one mixer in the cocktail of anxieties during isolated lockdown 鈥 I聽can recommend an eerily timely new book, Out of My Skull.
With nary a dull sentence (Harvard University Press鈥 editors must have checked diligently to ensure that the authors avoided the most obvious of sand traps here), psychology professors James Danckert and John D. Eastwood trace the facets of a seemingly nebulous and trivial condition, pointing to methods of transcending the titular phenomenon. In this boring season, it feels 鈥渕eta鈥 to think about boredom and, paradoxically, not at all monotonous (just as reading about food is not fattening and watching sports does not improve physical health).
Boredom is a wake-up call, a message from your psyche telling you to do something different 鈥 or just do something. But it鈥檚 not as easy as exhorting someone (or yourself) simply to snap out of it, the writers caution: 鈥淲e would not tell someone who is drowning and unable to swim to simply swim to shore.鈥
Not in itself dangerous, boredom can trigger unhealthy consequences such as depression and anxiety, poor self-esteem, risky choices and a lack of purpose. Trying to escape it, we may fall into a rabbit-hole (internet addiction, excessive gaming, television bingeing), which masks but does not cure the predicament. The trick is to embrace boredom and use it motivationally: make lemonade out of your lemony mood by finding an activity that provides some kind of growth, re-engagement.
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In crisp, jargon-free prose calculated to stave off any whiff of ennui 鈥 a聽model of academic 鈥渃rossover鈥 writing 鈥 Danckert and Eastwood explain that when boredom makes us sluggish or restless, 鈥渨e should pay attention to it and understand it鈥. Being bored is 鈥渜uite fascinating and maybe, just maybe, it might even be helpful鈥. We require a聽sense of agency, since 鈥淲hen this need is fulfilled, we flourish. When this need is thwarted, we feel bored, disengaged.鈥 A call to action, boredom 鈥渇orces you to ask a consequential question: What should I聽do?鈥
The book defines boredom in myriad ways. 鈥淭o be bored is to be painfully stuck in the here and now, bereft of any capacity for self determination,鈥 the authors explain. It is 鈥渁聽lack of meaning鈥, a state of disconnection, a time when 鈥渙ur mental capacities, our skills and talents, lay idle鈥, our mental capacity under-utilised, accentuated by 鈥渄eficient attention鈥 or 鈥渁聽break in the flow of thought鈥. Four telltale signs 鈥 time dragging on; struggling to concentrate; activities feeling pointless; and lethargy 鈥 produce 鈥渢he uncomfortable feeling of wanting, but being unable, to engage in satisfying activity鈥.
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Psychological studies show that bored people, seeking relief, may be prone to self-harm, drug or alcohol misuse, problem eating and impulsivity. Boredom 鈥減redicts problematic smartphone use鈥, according to one study: 鈥淭he more bored you are, the more likely your attachment to your phone will be unhealthy鈥 and, instead of alleviating boredom, it will 鈥渓ikely make things worse in the long run鈥.
At the extreme, violent and psychopathic behaviour may erupt: a German nurse suspected of murdering a hundred people 鈥渃laimed he killed to alleviate boredom鈥. In a study of Danish prison inmates, many reported that 鈥渂oredom and the desire to seek stimulation had landed them in trouble鈥.
Some studies report positive consequences: people may be more philanthropically generous, to recover a sense of meaning that boredom occludes. (Perhaps that is why telethons tend to be so stultifying, the authors conjecture.) But boredom, stimulating a drive to affirm an attenuated sense of identity, may also provoke political extremism and tribalism. To sustain peace, Danckert and Eastwood write, people must be able 鈥渢o author their own lives and find meaning. Otherwise boredom will flourish and, in turn, give rise to a fascination with violence and the glorification of war.鈥 Boredom alone will not precipitate war, but it may set the stage: 鈥淲hen bored, we cast about looking for something that will make us feel as though our lives have purpose.鈥 A peaceful society, conversely, provides plentiful sources of happiness and engagement.
The cultural history of boredom goes back to Seneca, who linked it to disgust: 鈥淗ow long the same things? Surely I聽will yawn, I聽will sleep, I聽will eat, I聽will be thirsty, I聽will be cold, I聽will be hot. Is there no end?鈥ll things pass that they may return. I聽do nothing new. I聽see nothing new. Sometimes this makes me seasick [nauseous].鈥
Charles Dickens gets credit for introducing the word 鈥渂oredom鈥 into English usage (in Bleak House, obviously). A smorgasbord of other terms and tropes include the German langeweile (literally, 鈥渓ong while鈥: interminably stretching time); in Middle English it was 鈥渟pleen鈥, in Latin acedia (which became the sin of sloth, from 鈥渟low鈥), in Italian pococurante (鈥渃aring little鈥).
William James wrote of 鈥渋rremediable flatness鈥; S酶ren Kierkegaard thought boredom was the root of all evil, as it 鈥渞ests upon the nothingness that winds its way through existence鈥. Martin Heidegger describes a continuum from superficial boredom (such as waiting for a late train as time drags on) to profound boredom, which 鈥渉as no object or source. It is timeless and represents a kind of emptiness in which we get a terrifying view of reality.鈥 This existentialist morass, Danckert and Eastwood write, spotlights the crux of boredom: 鈥渢he sense that things lack meaning鈥.
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Humanists have generated a small but distinguished collection of monographs including Boredom: The Literary History of a State of Mind (1995), by University of Virginia English professor Patricia Meyer Spacks; University of Bergen philosopher Lars Svendsen鈥檚 A聽Philosophy of Boredom (2005); and Boredom: A聽Lively History (2008), by University of Calgary classicist Peter Toohey. Out of My Skull extends this interdisciplinarity into psychology, although certainly Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi鈥檚 Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience (1990), about happiness, positivity and fulfilling involvement with life, is an influential predecessor.
Indeed, the final chapter, 鈥淛ust go with the flow鈥, uses a Csikszentmihalyian template to explain how we may surmount boredom by finding 鈥渁聽balance between what the moment demands of us and our ability to skillfully meet those demands鈥. We need a Goldilocks equilibrium 鈥 just right 鈥 so our experiences are not too simple nor too complex, either of which disgruntles. We must feel in control, with clear options and goals that encourage us to throw ourselves into the activity at hand; boredom-prone people are good at procrastinating, talking themselves out of embarking on things.
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Our lives flow most effectively when we are focused, not distracted. If bored people are excessively self-aware and anxiously self-doubting, people in a state of flow may find that 鈥渁ll awareness of the self dissipates鈥 and their experiences, even if they require skill and training, seem effortless. For a bored person, time plods on, but people in the flow feel liberated from time. Interest, curiosity, exploration, even just pleasantly quiet relaxation, all become possible, as they are not to the person suffering from boredom.
Randy Malamud is Regents鈥 professor of English at Georgia State University and the author of Email (2019) and Strange, Bright Crowds of Flowers: A聽Cultural History (forthcoming).
Out of My Skull: The Psychology of Boredom
By James Danckert and John D. Eastwood
Harvard University Press, 272pp, 拢22.95
ISBN 9780674984677
Published 26 June 2020
The authors
James Danckert, a professor in the department of psychology at the University of Waterloo, Canada, was born and grew up in Melbourne, Australia and studied literature and psychology at the University of Melbourne before going on to graduate work at LaTrobe University and then postdoctoral research at the University of Western Ontario.
John D. Eastwood, an associate professor in the department of psychology at York University, Canada, was born and raised in Toronto. After studying psychology at the University of Toronto, he went on to a PhD in clinical psychology at the University of Waterloo and now claims that 鈥渉aving one foot in the clinical realm and another in the basic science of cognition shapes my academic career鈥.
Asked what led them to the slightly improbable topic of boredom, Danckert says he 鈥渇eel[s] boredom鈥檚 sting more than I聽would like and so want[s] to understand聽it鈥, although adding that his brother sustained a head injury at the age of 19 and, during recovery, 鈥渢alked about being bored and hating聽it鈥, which led him to 鈥渨ant to know more about how his brain had changed鈥. Eastwood, meanwhile, 鈥渨as drawn to study the unengaged mind because of my curiosity about how the structure of thought impacts feeling, as well as observations of my patients who struggled with unremitting boredom鈥.
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As to ways of coping with boredom at a time of social distancing and other restrictions, Danckert suggests that 鈥渋f we can calm down and figure out what matters to us most, I聽think we can conquer聽it鈥. Eastwood adds that 鈥渨e should focus on internal factors such as emotional avoidance that can thwart our agency from the inside and leave us bored. We have some control over internal causes of boredom, and self-determination is precisely what鈥檚 at stake when stuck in boredom鈥.
Matthew Reisz
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Deadly dull, full of ennui
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