Skip to main content

Importance Of Wasting Time

THE IMPORTANCE OF WASTING TIME

















There will always be an endless list of chores to complete and work to do, and a culture of relentless productivity tells us to get to it right away and feel terribly guilty about any time wasted. But the truth is, a life spent dutifully responding to emails is a dull one indeed. And “wasted” time is, in fact, highly fulfilling and necessary.
The problem comes when we spend so long frantically chasing productivity, we refuse to take real breaks. We put off sleeping in, or going for a long walk, or reading by the window—and, even if we do manage time away from the grind, it comes with a looming awareness of the things we should be doing, and so the experience is weighed down by guilt.
It’s not as though we need to work so hard. As Alex Soojung-Kim Pan, author of REST: Why You Get More Done When You Work Less, writes in Nautilus, luminaries including Charles Dickens, Gabriel García Márquez, and Charles Darwin had quite relaxed schedules, working for five hours a day or less. The truth is, work expands to fill the time it’s given and, for most of us, we could spend considerably fewer hours at the office and still get the same amount done.
“Wasting time is about recharging your battery and de-cluttering,” he says. Taking time to be totally, gloriously, proudly unproductive will ultimately make you better at your job, says Guttridge. But it’s also fulfilling in and of itself.
Don't just work hard but also work smarter..!!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Inside The Quietest Place On Earth

Microsoft build anechoic chamber at its Redmond headquarters . The specialty of the room is that background noise level inside that room is -20.6 dB . Normal breathing produces 10dB sound. The room is so quiet , you can hear your blood flow. Six concrete rooms within rooms that enclose the chamber. They can reduce the noise of a jet taking off to a whisper. Inside the room you can also hear the noise produced by colliding air molecules that is -24 dB. It is the theoretical limit of quietness outside a vacuum. It was build in 2015 . The year it was made it also made a world record beating the -9.4 dB mark of Orfield Laborities in Minneapolis. In above mentioned (Orfield Lab.) room a man survived only for 9 seconds and then died due to the noise produced by his blood flow.