Psychology/Why Boredom is Good For You
Why Boredom is Good For You

Why Boredom is Good For You

4 chapters
  • The Boredom Paradox(0'002'03)
    Participants were placed in a room for 6-15 minutes with only a button that would shock them if pressed. Despite previously saying they would pay to avoid shocks, 25% of women and 67% of men chose to shock themselves rather than be left alone with their thoughts.
    • 95% of American adults participate in leisure activities • Only 17% spend time just relaxing and thinking • People actively avoid boredom despite discomfort
    Boredom is not having nothing to do, but when none of the available options appeal to you. It is characterized by lack of concentration, restlessness, and lethargy—a state of being underwhelmed.
    With social media, news, and smartphones constantly available, people reach for their phones to avoid boredom in any situation—at coffee shops, traffic lights, and even in class.
  • Boredom Fuels Creativity(2'033'43)
    When bored, your mind naturally wanders with attention not focused on anything in particular. This unfocused state enables creative thinking.
    Participants who read a boring phone book were then asked to generate creative ideas for uses of a plastic cup. Those in the boredom condition produced the most creative solutions compared to less bored controls.
    Boredom serves as an indicator that something in your current situation isn't working for you, prompting awareness of dissatisfaction.
    Despite making you feel tired and sluggish, boredom actually spurs you to action and motivates you to make positive changes in your life.
  • Deeper Impacts of Boredom(3'435'07)
    Boredom may increase altruistic behavior. The sense of aimlessness can trigger people to think about others and how they can help, giving purpose to their lives.
    • Bored participants are more likely to donate to charity • Bored participants are more likely to give blood • Meaningful but unpleasant activities hold more value when bored
    Boredom cultivates autobiographical planning—thinking about your life as a story and considering where you want it to go. This aimlessness leads to reflection on long-term goals.
    When your brain is constantly consumed with stimuli, you rarely ponder the bigger picture or set long-term goals. Boredom is essential for thinking about your future and how to achieve your goals.
  • The Cost of Avoiding Boredom(5'077'21)
    Every moment of waiting presents a choice: pull out your phone or experience boredom and your own thoughts. This seems insignificant but carries real consequences.
    • Less creativity in problem-solving • Less altruistic behavior and empathy • Less self-assessment of current state • Less goal-setting for the future
    By avoiding the unpleasantness of boredom through phones, you are like the study participants who shocked themselves—but the pain goes deeper to who you are and who you will become.
    Being bored is something our brains need. The decision to embrace rather than avoid boredom has profound implications for your creativity, compassion, and future.