At some point over the weekend my eye caught a couple stories about people setting timers to be “bored.” One of the people featured had his laptop turned toward the camera with a running clock. The time he spent sitting around “bored” was sped up so the whole video ran for only 36 seconds. His lofty goal was to increase his “bored” time by a minute every day up to an ultimate goal. I actually forgot what the goal was because I felt a little bored reading about it.
The second person aimed to be “bored” for 20 hours. This also included not getting anything to eat or drink to avoid all sorts of stimulation. Essentially, his idea of boredom was to sit around with no devices, no TV, radio, media, food (?!), or anything. For hours.
I’m a proud Gen X-er. By today’s standards of on-demand everything and instant gratification, it probably seems unthinkable how we even managed to pass time and have fun. But when I reflect on my childhood, I don’t recall long bouts of boredom. I think mostly we came up with creative ways to not feel bored. Or sometimes we lounged around reading magazines, talking, and waiting for that one hit song to play on the radio or MTV. Then we would spring into action to record it on a cassette tape or VHS, if we were lucky. The point is, we didn’t deprive ourselves of stimulation to fabricate feelings of boredom.
The irony of these people’s experiments is that engaging with media and scrolling can get boring. All this doom scrolling and constant bombardment of over-stylized, sensationalized posts feels tedious after a while. The Merriam Webster dictionary defines boredom as “the state of being weary and restless through lack of interest.” I have to confess, this is often how I feel after engaging with anything for too long. At times like these, I start longing for a good paperback, some quiet time away from vibrating notifications and beeping alerts.
In my opinion, if these people really wanted to experience boredom, or at least experience it Gen-X style, they wouldn’t need to broadcast it. They wouldn’t post about anything, video themselves, or create a spectacle and media opportunity from “disengaging,” all in the name of boredom. To me, that’s defeating the purpose, but maybe I’m just a little bored from all the hype.
