[HN Gopher] Too much free time may be almost as bad as too little
___________________________________________________________________
Too much free time may be almost as bad as too little
Author : porterde
Score : 15 points
Date : 2021-09-09 19:34 UTC (3 hours ago)
(HTM) web link (www.apa.org)
(TXT) w3m dump (www.apa.org)
| eplanit wrote:
| Yes, but then there are examples like this guy:
|
| https://www.businessinsider.com/woodworker-drivable-wooden-b...
|
| ...who I hope gets as much free time as is possible.
| bpodgursky wrote:
| Is it really "free time", if you've committed to an ambitious
| professional (he's a carpenter) project to fill the time?
| "Treat your hobby as a job" seems compatible with the OP
| thesis.
| loa_in_ wrote:
| Anecdotally I can report myself having an enormous excess of free
| time but only because I'm in a tough financial and mental
| situation, I have no job, but I'm also living a very frugal
| lifestyle to compensate. This frugality leads to few
| possibilities to meaningfully go forward. For the last year and
| until next month or so I'm having basically unlimited free time,
| but I'm not happy about it.
| ggm wrote:
| I'm close to retirement age. I'm advised by everyone I ask not
| to just go "cold turkey", but find things to do which give
| respect from others, and contribute to some activity. It could
| be part-time work, or volunteering, but taking a role in an
| activity which builds something, is better for your health.
| It's probably a variant of CBT, taking behaviour which commands
| respect engenders a sense of self-respect which lifts the
| spirit. You have purpose.
|
| Talking to unemployed people, who want to work, I also know
| they say that the support systems in the state typically make
| this really hard: you cannot commit to work without pay, if it
| risks your status as unemployed, to recieve welfare. If you
| have to go in to interview or for some welfare process, and
| can't volunteer that day, a lot of agencies can't use you
| because they can't rely on you. So, its a double trap: its
| "safer" to do nothing, because you can't either let down the
| people you want to do things with or, be denied welfare. Truly,
| a trap.
|
| So, if you don't have a risk here, I very much suggest you find
| some thing to do, any thing, which contributes back to some
| other endevour. Wash dishes in a local kindy. Hold newborn
| babies in hospital whose parents can't be there. Help pack food
| for people who are starving. Join a morning pick-up-litter
| group.
|
| I also know how tedious these suggestions are, how much they
| hurt and irritate. When they were put to me in times past, I
| "bit back" and told people not to be facetious or patronising.
| I knew these things could be done, I didn't need to be "told".
| I had to be driven out of a slump, taken in hand, and guided to
| a better sense of my place in the world, so I don't say this as
| "haven't walked there".
|
| (I only say this because you strongly suggest your are aware
| this situation is not improving your mental health, or making
| you happy. To use an internet witticism or two, "you do you"
| and "Im not the boss of you")
| HenryKissinger wrote:
| Nonsense.
___________________________________________________________________
(page generated 2021-09-09 23:00 UTC)