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Boredom

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  • #214603
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Shreya:

    I think that “Next time whenever you feel bored, take a step back and simply observe your feeling”, is a great suggestion.

    A few days ago I was doing a very boring task in the kitchen, removing the pits from lots and lots of cherries, one by one, using a small tool. It was very unpleasant for me. I noticed my discomfort, but it didn’t make the task any less boring for me, or more interesting. What I did was to discontinue the task and continue the next day and that was helpful. I felt relief when it was over and I felt good for enduring the discomfort and completing the job regardless.

    Do you have any comments about my cherry experience, any suggestions?

    anita

    #214641
    Shreya
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    I can completely empathise with your feeling of joy. I feel the same whenever I do endure the fear and discomfort of doing a challenging or boring task. It all comes down to our own assumption and attitudes, which generates certain kind of feelings. And have you noticed that the more you try to change your perspective, the more harder it becomes to like a specific boring/challenging task at hand?

    #214683
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Shreya:

    Our thoughts do generate feelings. It is also true that feelings generate thoughts. There is a strong connection between thoughts and feelings.

    I didn’t understand your question, can you restate it?

    anita

    #214705
    Shreya
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    What I meant to say was that the more you try to like something which you dislike, the intensity of dislike increases even further. It is termed as the backwards law, if I am not wrong.

    #214707
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Shreya:

    Yes, I noticed and I agree.

    anita

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