I believe boredom is really only a restlessness within us. We have what we want and need, yet we are still bored.
For me boredom means, nothing pleases me, I don't know what I really want. Probably many things I could be doing but feel like doing none of them.
For me: pure restlessness.
And the cure for that is a swift kick in the tush.....lol
Unfortunately, I can't kick myself, so you see, there is always a problem... :)
2006-07-24 11:28:40
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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It can’t be restlessness as I am restless myself yet never bored.
Possibly it is lack of curiosity about the world. There are so many fascinating things going on around that surely one lifetime is not enough to explore a fraction of it.
It also could be lack of something specific, but not pinned down yet.
The root of all evil? I don't trust Tolstoy, apparently he was a horrid man, a religious fanatic. Considering the times he lived in, when religion was one of the means to keep people under control, I suspect the worst of him. Something like: " when you are bored, it means you are not working and you are not too tired of work to just fall asleep where you are standing. You have time to look at your life from some perspective and think - should I blindly follow what this people above me said? Danger, danger, give the guy more work, don't let his mind to wonder"
The despairing refusal to be oneself? Too complicated, I never mastered Kierkegaard.
2006-07-25 04:19:39
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answer #2
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answered by Feniks 2
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The rationale why battle turns out to persist may be very practical, although maybe now not politically right: battle WORKS. It might not be satisfactory, or amusing, or cheap. But it DOES remedy a few issues. It might be delusion to fake in any other case. And many times, it's extra satisfactory, extra amusing, and no more luxurious than different methods of resolving issues, as unusual as that can look. We won't like battle, however all of us improvement from its lifestyles instantly and not directly. Technologies are constructed for wars which might be used for peace. War creates a necessity for society that could now not be as compelling in any other case. Even if you'll be able to do away with the variety of battle that entails bodily violence, there are different forms of wars to don't forget. Wars of suggestions. Wars of economics. Wars of politics and social endeavors. Reasonable persons generally come to exclusive conclusions from the equal knowledge. Though they don't continuously come to blows over them, it infrequently makes one of the most conflicts any much less vehement. I'm now not announcing that we will have to search battle. But I am announcing that its now not the terrible monster it is generally made out to be. War is Nature's method of constructing certain that the robust live to tell the tale and do good. Doesn't it serve us taken with this to be so? There may be the opposite facet. What is an international of ultimate peace like? A global wherein there's in no way any clash of any variety? The photo that almost all generally involves my brain is a barren wasteland or the dead floor of the Moon. In a few senses, peace is dying. It is the battle that exemplifies lifestyles. It is the resistance that makes an athlete robust, or distinguishes the well from the unhealthy. Where there is not any resistance, there is not any rationale for something else.
2016-08-28 18:45:33
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I think of boredom as being a signal or warning flag to keep us motivated from keeping our lives tedious. How do most people react to boredom? Is it enjoyable? When I feel "bored" I usually try to get busy doing something constructive. The anxiety that accompanies my own state of boredom is not enjoyable to me so I try to ward it off. I cannot relate to it being a desire for desires, just an undesirable state of mind that can be altered by upgrading some aspect of my behavior.
2006-07-24 17:18:48
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answer #4
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answered by Sassy 6
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I think boredom occurs after the desires have been satisfied or fulfilled. I guess the question then is "what are we to do with free time, and what does free time imply about "being" or "existing"?"
2006-07-24 08:53:42
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answer #5
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answered by The Witten 4
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Boredom was begot by an idea that something outside of yourself is what must entertain you.
2006-07-25 10:14:57
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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We're human...we'll never be happy/content. We always want something more/better. The grass is always greener in the neighbor's yard.
2006-07-25 04:38:17
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answer #7
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answered by ? 6
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OhNOOOO...are you getting tired of the Dyson already?
2006-07-24 12:31:20
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answer #8
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answered by Einstein 7
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that what we only a feeling, every people will not have the same experience
2006-07-24 08:24:04
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answer #9
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answered by N O 2
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yes. stop shopping...
2006-07-24 08:02:09
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answer #10
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answered by Arun M 5
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