Writers understand this instinctively, even if we resist it. Writing is thinking. Good writing requires wandering. Rabbit holes that go nowhere. Staring into space. Yet we pressure ourselves to churn out words as if volume alone creates meaning. Quantity is easier than sitting with uncertainty.
I
know people who are uncomfortable being alone with themselves.
That’s nuts to me.
Boredom introduces you to your unfiltered thoughts. No distractions. No performance. Just you. That’s uncomfortable. So we outsource thinking to algorithms. We let machines create for us. We trade imagination for efficiency and call it
progress.
That’s not evolution. That’s avoidance.
Some of my clearest memories come from being bored as a child. Lying on the grass, staring up at the clouds so long that the world opened up. Every blade is different. Every insect has a story. Entire ecosystems hiding in plain sight. I didn’t know it then, but that’s where
my love of world-building came from. That’s where my belief that the world is layered with unseen stories took root.
Nothing magical happened, really.
Nothing had to.
That’s the point.
Boredom gave my mind room to
wander. And wandering minds discover things focused minds miss.
I tried to carry that forward with my children. We didn’t pack every moment with activities. We let boredom do its quiet work. And creativity followed. Music. Writing. Drawing. Experimentation. They weren’t afraid of empty time. Boredom became background noise, not an emergency.
As adults, we lose that tolerance.
Bills arrive. Responsibilities stack up. The pressure to produce becomes economic, not just cultural. And yes, most of us can’t disappear for years to “find ourselves.” But here’s the uncomfortable truth: it’s easier to stay busy producing mediocre work than it is to sit with boredom long enough for something better to
emerge.
Boredom doesn’t slow progress.
It improves direction.
My best work has never come from deadlines alone. It comes from restlessness. From silence. From letting half-formed ideas bump into each other without interference.
Boredom is not a reward you earn after success.
It’s a requirement for meaningful creation and a fulfilled life.
You don’t need more stimulation.
You need more permission to do nothing without guilt.
The next time you feel bored, don’t panic. Don’t reach for the phone. Smile. You’re entering the most underrated phase of thinking. Sit there. Let the clock tick. Let your mind roam. That’s not wasted time.
That’s where the real work begins.
Peace, love and power.