On The Death of Daydreaming

In this article in After Babel, Christine Rosen explores “interstitial time”; the gaps between things, as with the cells in your body or the spaces between architectural columns. When applied to time, it means the many bits of time scattered throughout the day such as the five minutes that students have in between classes, or the unknown number of seconds that pass while you are waiting for an elevator. These moments used to be given over to silent reflection or conversation with whoever is around. Now, for most of us, nearly all of them are grabbed by our phones.

But boredom has a purpose. To understand and harness it, we need to give our minds more opportunities to experience it. Christine explores the many ways our efforts to conquer boredom through technology have produced unintended consequences, including the near-total capture of our attention, the death of daydreaming, and the end of a healthy sense of anticipation in our daily lives.

After Babel – > Read more here

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