Thursday, August 20, 2020
5 Ways to Create Solitude with Minimalism
5 Ways to Create Solitude with Minimalism Our daily lives are filled with noise, and every day its getting harder to turn down the volume. Even the places in which we used to find brief stints of solitude have been enveloped by our heavily mediated culture: airport waiting rooms pipe infotainment into our heads via overhead HD monitors, grocery store check-out lines drip soul-crushing pop music into our ears, and even bookstores (whats left of them) bombard us with ambient advertisements and visual clutter. And dont get me started on the things within our control: our televisions, Internet connections, smartphones, tablets, and our infinite technical advancesâ"most of which cocoon our attention spans every waking moment of every day. Often the noise feels inescapable, un-turn-down-able, utterly overwhelming. The only way to avoid it seems to be while were sleeping. (Or does it invade our dreams, too?) But theres good news: we can turn down the noise. Its not easy, and it takes a certain kind of awareness, but we can turn it down. It is our choice. Iâve found at least five ways to create solitude in chaotic times. 1. Wake early. Wake slowly. Take your time. Think. I write in the mornings in a quiet room with no distractionsâ"no TV, no radio, no clocks, no noise: just me, my thoughts, and the words on the page. 2. Schedule time to read. I love reading, especially literary fiction. It is a way for me to force myself into solitude: just me, my thoughts, and the characters on the page. 3. Go for a walk. I walk all the time. Walking gives me uninterrupted time to think, time for myself, time inside my head to marshal my thoughts and emotions. Even if itâs a fifteen-minute walk, itâs worth my time: just me, my thoughts, and the city lights under Midwest skies. 4. Exercise. I exercise every day. Sometimes I go to the gym. Sometimes I do push-ups, squats, and pull-ups in the park. Whatever I do, I have the opportunity to do it by myself in solitude: just me, my thoughts, and my body in motion. 5. Get rid of distractions. This sounds like common sense, but weâre so distracted by the noise that common sense doesnât seem all that common these days. But you can try to turn off your cellphone for a while, dump your television, kill the Internet for a month, get rid of a few clocks, check email and social networks only once a day, and find other ways to remove subtle distractions from your life. Thatâs what Iâve done, and itâs great: just me, my thoughts, and a more meaningful life. Read this essay and 150 others in our new book, Essential.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.