Laziness
“A
man is much too lazy: he will do a great deal without the proper
intensity, or he will do nothing at all while thinking that he is
doing something; he will work with intensity on something that does
not need intensity, and will let those moments when intensity is
imperative pass by him.”
G.I.
Gurdjieff
I
have to admit that I cringe a little when I read this quote. My book
group met here at my house last night, and when I was cleaning up in
preparation for them to come, I discovered its cold, hard truth. Just
pull out a piece of furniture in my house, and you will see
baseboards coated with dust. All the places where I never look, like
the tops of things—picture frames, book shelves, the
refrigerator---ugh, terrible. And that tile in my bathroom with the
hard water stains—forget it! I would much rather write, or sew, or
draw pictures than clean my house. Never mind that half of what I do
will never see the light of day.
I
have a couple of young friends who are into video games and will sit
for hours and play them, totally oblivious of the rest of the world,
and their precious youth passing them by. I can't think of a bigger
waste of time, but then I'm an old lady. Or how about the obsessive
physical fitness buff; some of those folks spend three or four hours
a day preparing for...what? The biggest biceps? The
tightest...whatever. I'm all for fitness, but really, unless you're a
defensive lineman in the NFL, four hours a day is not about fitness.
And
then there's the computer seeker: people who sit all day and peruse
the internet for who knows what. I have one friend who even brings
her I-phone to meals and plays internet scrabble while she
eating---even when she has guests at the table! And let's not forget
the insatiable internet shopper. They are, in my experience, usually
the very people who need absolutely nothing, but they shop, shop,
shop like a slum dweller who's just discovered the pot at the end of
the rainbow. It's a puzzle. Human beings are endlessly intriguing.
There's
nothing wrong with wasting time now and then. We all need our
down-time and relaxation. It's just when all our juice and
concentration is plowed into something utterly meaningless that
“lazy” becomes a problem. I think I'll see if I can bring the
'proper intensity' to those bathroom tiles today...ugh.
In
the spirit,
Jane
1 comment:
Your home was particularly warm and comfortable....could it have been the coziness of the dust? But, alas, alack, I did not see anything that resembled dust. I say a group of women chatting, laughing, enjoying and having an interlude with nary a care with the outside world. For this I thank you for the warmth of your home. Mary
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