What bores you?
Boredom is my greatest adversary. It’s like a silent villain creeping into the corners of my existence, threatening to plunge me into a dull abyss. The mere thought of standing still, embracing stasis, sends shivers down my spine. Life, to me, is a vibrant dance, and boredom is that awkward partner no one wants to be stuck with.
Four-hour-long movies? Please, spare me the agony! Two-hour meetings that feel like an eternity? I’d rather be doing interpretative dance in a field of daisies. I think I have done that. Pontificating people, humorless souls, and bland food – they’re all members of the boredom brigade. I crave the spice of life, the zest of laughter, and the exhilaration of engaging conversations.
And don’t even get me started on water. Drinking it? Boresville. But playing in it? Now, that’s a splash of excitement! It’s all about movement, the fluidity of experience that keeps the tango of life enthralling.
Imagine a world where every moment is a whirlwind of possibilities, where boredom is a distant memory. I thrive on the thrill of constant motion, the heartbeat of life pulsating through every adventure. If life were a novel, boredom would be that monotonous chapter I’d gladly skip.
I’ve often wondered why some people find solace in the stillness of routine. To me, routine is the arch-nemesis of spontaneity, the extinguisher of the fiery passion that makes life truly exhilarating. The mundane, the predictable – they are the culprits behind the yawns and heavy eyelids.
So, let’s break free from the shackles of monotony. Let’s embrace the chaos, the unpredictability, and the ever-changing rhythm of life. Boredom may knock on our door, but we shall dance it away with a spirited tap.
I propose a toast to a life filled with movement, laughter, and the sweet taste of unpredictability. Let boredom be a mere spectator in the grand theater of our existence, while we take center stage in the delightful performance of our lives. Cheers to the dance, my fellow thrill-seekers!
Categories: Culture, identity, mental health, Psychology, society





Finding the Flow the Sweet Spot Tween Apathy/Boredom And Anxiety
Dear Miriam i’ve Surely Experienced Both Sides of the Coin where Life
Itself Practically Breathing Was Over Stimulating to me on the Other
Hand Getting Away From All Work Related
Stress for 16 Years Now Comparatively
Speaking My Myelin Nerves
Are Wrapped With
Titanium as Rare
Does Any Stress Over Stimulate
me And Dear Lord There Are So Many
Human Potentials that May Be Fulfilled practically
For Free in Online Avenues for Art and Science And
What We May Come to Originally Create Like a Public
Dance in the Real World Now that that is Under my Control
Boredom is Rarely ever Experienced And The Sweet Spot
of Flow is
Mine to
Master 24/7
Unless i Decide
to Sleep Hehe Yes
Yet of Course i Push
the Limits too At the
Edge of What Could Become
Anxiety too True it’s a Thrill Always
to Expand Human Potentials Yet for me
i Ain’t Gonna Risk my Life Mountain Climbing
For the Plateaus of Flow i Can Achieve With Total
Safety Public Dancing in Barnes and Noble Listening
to Meditative Music Entertaining the Star Bucks College
Cafe Crowd While Reading an Entire Book in a About an
Hour Every
Sunday
After
Noon
FOR FREE
CHEAP SKaTinG
Mountain Climbers
Experiencing the Thrill
of Going Without a Safety
Harness Might Not ever entertain
That Idea As They Would Be Too Worried
What Others Might Think of them What a Life
Reaching an
Authentic
Way
Where
Other Folk’s
Nay-Saying is No
Different Than the
Feather i Become
As Wind Breezes Free
Yet It’s True When You are
Doing that at Around 250 Pounds
Still Capable of Warming Up with
1540 Pounds at the Military Gym
Leg Pressing it 12 Reps With
Arms Raised to the ‘Heavens’
It’s Not
Often
That the
NaySaying
is Done in Ear
or Eye View Hehe
As That’s ‘The Rule’ Never
Catch the Eye of the Public
Dancer Unless You Are That Free..:)
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If I had even the bare amount of energy to be bored, I don’t think I would be: there’s always a book. Or an adventure. Or something to learn.
Right now it’s all about finishing the Pride’s Children trilogy. After that, I’ll probably be up to my ears in marketing for years. Boredom isn’t on the list.
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Hear hear! Best wishes
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