Dec 042008
 

Fig­ur­ing out how best to spend “spare” time (that not alloc­ated to work­ing, sleep­ing, eat­ing, and the oth­er neces­sary daily activ­it­ies) is always a conun­drum. Do I read blogs, or write my own entries? Do I knit, or surf Ravelry? Do I watch TV, or read books? The pen­du­lum has recently been swinging too far in the wrong dir­ec­tion; I’ve been con­sum­ing more than cre­at­ing, tak­ing the easy, pass­ive way out to filling those spare minutes rather than think­ing about what I really want to achieve with them. It’s so easy to just “check what’s out there”, intend­ing it to be for a few minutes only, and find­ing the time stretches, like some ver­sion of Par­kin­son’s law, so that I’ve accom­plished noth­ing at the end of the even­ing. If I can­’t remem­ber what I’ve browsed, then was it worth read­ing? How much time should I spend on catch­ing up on what people I don’t know think? 

So, my plan is to think about my activ­it­ies more. If surf­ing, or read­ing feeds or tweets, then to do so delib­er­ately, rather than drift­ing along for lack of think­ing about what I’d really rather be doing. I’ll try to use my judge­ment more often, in oth­er words, to close the com­puter and spend more time with the world that’s phys­ic­ally present. Unless I decide that I feel like aim­lessly drift­ing through the Web, of course. 

I won­der how long I’ll keep this up?

  4 Responses to “Creating or Consuming”

  1. Good remind­er. I’m cur­rently in a situ­ation where I’m stay­ing in a place without a power plug in the room, so I can­’t use the inter­net in the even­ing. I’ve been feel­ing so much more pro­duct­ive the last few weeks because of that. More focused dur­ing the day and doing stuff that feels more “use­ful” in the even­ing (writ­ing, draw­ing, read­ing nov­els). In short, I com­pletely agree with your goal.

    (Now, is it only me who mis­read the first use of “surf” as the kind involving surf board and ocean and was then men­tally using that mean­ing through­out the post?)

  2. So this is about doing things delib­er­ately, with a pur­pose, versus drift­ing into activ­it­ies. And I mostly agree that drift­ing usu­ally leads to wasted time. But I’m reminded of Ivan Suth­er­land’s essay, “Tech­no­logy and Cour­age” — doing things delib­er­ately uses up some of the lim­ited amount of cour­age we have avail­able. And there’s some­thing to be said about drift­ing into things: your sub­con­scious is smart, it will lead you to inter­est­ing places sometimes.

    Any­way, think­ing about how you spend your time is a good thing. You can­’t totally get a grip of the wan­der­ing and drift­ing, but maybe you can chan­nel it away from obvi­ous sinkholes 🙂

  3. (Found your site through Tim Bray’s Twit­ter Stream)

    Cre­ativ­ity is essen­tial to hap­pi­ness, I believe. One test I pose myself when I find myself drift­ing online is the ques­tion “Is this a top­ic or con­ver­sa­tion I could con­trib­ute to?” or “Is this a per­son I’d like have a con­ver­sa­tion with?” The answer does­n’t always have to be yes, espe­cially if I’m read­ing the news or a fam­ous per­son’s web log. But when it is yes, it means I’m con­nect­ing to people and things. And it means I don’t have an excuse not to post some­thing on a blog or twit­ter, or send someone an email.

    View net­works, — form­al, inform­al, or even only the­or­et­ic­al — as a means for expres­sion, not just recep­tion, and see how well each net­work accom­plishes that goal for you.

    Good luck.

  4. It’s a con­tinu­al battle to be really present in one’s own life. I’m going to read the Suth­er­land essay that is men­tioned in the second com­ment– the idea shared here is inter­est­ing– but I think there is a sig­ni­fic­ant dif­fer­ence between get­ting “sucked in” or “drift­ing” and what I con­sider to be mind­ful wan­der­ing. The first two are easy for me, and not often in any way pro­duct­ive (in either a tra­di­tion­al sense of get­ting some­thing done or the more abstract sense of open­ing up my mind). If any­thing they are the opposite…

 Leave a Reply

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

(required)

(required)

/* ]]> */