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doing_nothing [2013-12-04 13:28] – old revision restored (2013/10/21 15:35) nikdoing_nothing [2014-02-19 01:28] – [Working Less] maja
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 A 3 minute breathing pause (in dutch): http://www.georgelangenberg.com/2011/12/drie-minuten-ademruimte/ A 3 minute breathing pause (in dutch): http://www.georgelangenberg.com/2011/12/drie-minuten-ademruimte/
 +
 +A talk from Medium about a [[https://medium.com/business-management/df4b03f67d69|Mindful Workplace]]
  
 === Karma Yoga === === Karma Yoga ===
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 ==== Working Less ==== ==== Working Less ====
   * http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2013/09/working-hours   * http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2013/09/working-hours
 +  * http://www.newyorker.com/talk/financial/2014/01/27/140127ta_talk_surowiecki
 +  * http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/12/why-the-9-to-5-day-is-so-tough-on-creative-workers/282331/
 +
  
 ==== Fishing ==== ==== Fishing ====
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   * no-grow zone   * no-grow zone
      
 +==== Homage to Idleness ====
 +
 +<blockquote>
 +Over the centuries, the illusion of mastering time through obedience to it came into acceptance. Across Europe, the medieval monastery’s bell tolled as a reminder to eat, sleep and pray. But while there must have been some soul’s release in relinquishing earthly sovereignty to that sound, as the clock’s authority spread, we sealed all the gaps through which curiosity might seep into our days. Curiosity, after all, could lure the susceptible way off track, as the Italian poet Petrarch learned in the spring of 1336, when he famously climbed Mont Ventoux, motivated by “nothing but the desire to see its conspicuous height.” One of the texts he carried along was Saint Augustine’s “Confessions,” detailing the moral dangers of such expeditions, when men “go out to admire the mountains,” or the course of the stars, and therein forget themselves. Chastened, Petrarch made his descent in silence.
 +
 +Only the Enlightenment redeemed our penchant to while away the hours in wonder. The English philosopher Thomas Hobbes called curiosity the “singular passion” separating humans from animals. Even better, it was “a Lust of the mind, that by a perseverance of delight in the continual and indefatigable generation of Knowledge exceedeth the short vehemence of any carnal Pleasure.” What pleasure we might know by letting curiosity have its way with us for an hour or two. 
 +
 +http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/30/opinion/homage-to-the-idols-of-idleness.html?ref=international&_r=2&_r=2&
 +
 +</blockquote>   
 +
 +
 +==== Doing nothing experiences ====
 +
 +
 +<blockquote>  
 +"Sometimes out here in nature you have days when its very quiet you know.. An you get these moments out in the forest when nothing makes any sound, when nothing moves, not even a leaf of grass. These are moments.. its really kind of weird you know.. when just for a moment you start to doubt if time has stopped. You get this weird feeling that you are trapped in.. in something like  photograph." Linas Ramanauskas of Nida Art Colony
 +</blockquote>
  
-      +<blockquote> 
-   +"After a week of Vipasana we'd been sitting inside meditating all the time. On the last day I went out behind the conference centre into the garden. And after that meditating the birds in the garden just hipped past me really close. They weren't scared at all." Cocky 
 +</blockquote>
  
  • doing_nothing.txt
  • Last modified: 2023-07-05 15:35
  • by maja