“Beware the barrenness of a busy life.” said Socrates approximately two and a half thousand years ago. Which was roughly the same time (give or take a few years for inexactitude) that the writer of Ecclesiastes exclaimed that there is nothing new under the sun.
“In a society where busyness is worn as a badge of honour…” There´s a big electrical storm on outside otherwise I might have gone for a run instead…
“When you signal you’re busy, you’re basically telling others that you are high status and important, not because what you wear is expensive, but [because] you are extremely desired and in high demand,” says Silvia Bellezza, co-author of a Harvard Business School study that argues that an overworked lifestyle, rather than a leisurely lifestyle, has become an aspirational status symbol.”
These quotes come from a couple of BBC articles that I´m finding thought provoking…
Is there an upside to having no social life
Busy: Badge of honour or a big lie?
It´s interesting that humans have moved on from the early consumerist myth that we were aiming to make life easier, and embraced a new-old myth that we need to free up more time in order to fill it with more stuff. As mission partners, charity workers, voluntary sector employees, we also feel an added pressure to justify our existence against supporters´ donations, which traditionally most of us do through reporting lists of things achieved or at least projects in progress. But even that is a bit of an excuse really. I think I probably use being busy doing some things as a way of avoiding thinking about other things, people, God, that I find more difficult. And now I´m really hoping it stops thundering and lightning soon so I can go for a run or I might actually have to do the admin that I´m putting off.