For more meaningful leisure, embrace
strenuous and virtuous hobbies and
schedule low-quality activities.
You shouldn’t underestimate the value of quality
leisure time. As the legendary philosopher
Aristotle pointed out, to live the good life, one
must have the downtime needed for deep
contemplation, for no other reason than to enjoy
the activity itself. As Aristotle expert Kieran
Setiya elaborates, activities that provide a
“source of inward joy” are vital to a satisfying life.
The author calls these activities high-quality
leisure while calling digital distractions such as
social media and absent-minded bingeing low-
quality leisure. Therefore, one aim of digital
minimalism is to make more room for the high-
quality while purposefully limiting low-quality
time.
In looking at what exactly makes a high-quality
activity, the author has found that hobbies
requiring strenuous effort are often among the
most rewarding. This may sound tiring at first,
but as the influential British writer Arnold Bennett
once noted, the more effort you put into your
leisure activities, the more you’ll be rewarded
with satisfaction and even come away feeling
energized.
Engaging physically with real, three-dimensional
objects is also key, as Gary Rogowski points out
in his book Craftsman. As such, poking your
finger at a small screen is unlikely to ever be a
truly satisfying or rewarding human endeavor.
This is why one of the “leisure lessons” of digital
minimalism is to engage with the physical world
by applying skills and working to create things of
value. And for this, technology can be a great
aide. With the abundance of YouTube tutorials
out there, you can easily spend a rewarding
weekend either building your own wooden
headboard or learning some basic techniques to
become a weekend carpenter.
You could also set leisure-time goals, like
learning the guitar parts to five Beatles songs in
time for a mini-concert at a friend’s Sunday
barbeque in three weeks. Deadlines like this are
great for keeping high-quality momentum going.
To make sure you don’t succumb to the
weekend-killing temptations of low-quality
leisure, the best plan isn’t to go cold turkey, but
rather to schedule these activities for specific
times.
Going cold turkey can easily backfire and result
in a relapse of old behavioral patterns, so start
by scheduling isolated chunks of low-quality time
on evenings and weekends while you give the
rest of your free-time over to high-quality
activities. Chances are you’ll feel the difference
in quality, and the digital distractions will
gradually become less of a concern.
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