I saw a dear friend recently. I asked her how she was doing; she looked up, voice lowered, and whimpered: “I’m so busy… I am so busy… have so much going on.” As we spoke, she mentioned she worked over 50
hours per week all year and had very little time off. She spends weekends in the office. I thought I had a hard time only
having 81 days off this year, including weekends and holidays. She said she has less than 70 days off,
including weekends. We both agreed we
looked like hell and went on our way.
Today, I met another
friend and asked him how it was going. He
explained his wife had left him and their child. She left for a co-worker. He said
she sought a divorce, full custody, and a vast spousal support payment. He said he took a second job to pay lawyers
and try to save the little hope. They had been married for 4 years. His tone was the same I heard a few days earlier, “I’m just so busy… got
so much to do and not enough time or money.”
The tone I hear (and
often speak) is exacerbated, tired, and overwhelmed.
This
is a sad state of the adult life. Then, a
co-worker was trying to get another co-worker to get together with the kids for
an outing. They grabbed their phones and
scrolled… and scrolled… and scrolled. They finally screed the kids, who had an hour
open in two weeks. They set the
date. They said it is so hard
as the child has swimming, gymnastics, piano, and voice lessons and is so
busy.”
I learned long ago that horribly
destructive habits start early, really early. I spend time thinking about myself, wondering how I ended up living like this, why I do this to myself, and why I work until I can’t function, only to sleep and start again. I forget I am a human being, not a human doing. g?
I never learned to sit
with the people I love so much and have a slow, meaningful conversation about
the state of our hearts and souls. Are these conversations slow to unfold,
conversations with pregnant pauses and silences that we are in no rush to fill?
How have I evolved to
create a world around me where I have more and more to do with less
time for leisure, reflection, community, and time
to just… be?
This common disease I
find so many have acquired is simply called “busy” and is spiritually destructive
to my health and well-being. It saps my ability to be fully present with those
we love the most in our families and keeps me from forming the kind of
community and friendship I desperately crave.
Since the 1970s, I
have seen many new technological innovations that I thought (or were
promised) would make my life easier, faster, and more straightforward. Yet, I have significantly
less “free” or leisurely time today than I did decades ago.
For me, the lines
between work and home have become blurred. I live on my device. ALL THE
FREAKING TIME. My smartphone (made me
dumb) and laptop mean no division between the office and home.
One of my daily
struggles is the avalanche of emails. I recently took 5 days from work to
stop the burnout from coming on, and I returned to over 400 emails and 30
voicemails. Some were repeated with
anger for the delay in not responding. Even when I had an auto-reply saying I was out of the office. I’ve tried different techniques: only
responding in the evenings, not responding over weekends, and asking people to
schedule more face-to-face time. The emails keep on coming in unfathomable volumes. And people expect a response — right now. I, too, it turns
out… am so busy.
The reality looks
very different for others, like my sister. Working two jobs in low-paying
sectors is the only way to keep the family afloat. They say over 20 percent of children
are living in poverty, and too many of our parents are working minimum wage
jobs just to put a roof over their heads and something resembling food on the
table. We are all so busy.
So I am worn. I remember I am still human,
not just a machine checking off items from my to-do list. I retell myself that I am more than just a machine
checking off items from my to-do list. I need a different relationship to
work with technology. I know what I want: a meaningful life, a sense of
community, a balanced existence. It’s not just about “leaning in” or faster
iPhones. I want to be truly human.
WB Yeats wrote: “It takes more
courage to examine the dark corners of your soul than it does for a soldier
to fight on a battlefield.” How exactly am I supposed to examine the
dark corners of my soul when I am so busy? How am I supposed to live the
examined life? I have always been a prisoner of
hope, but I wonder if I will have the necessary structural conversation about how to do and live like that. Somehow, I need a
different organizing model in my life, society, family, and community.
But my recently encountered friends and my co-worker’s children have no clue how. Neither do I…
2 comments:
I have followed your blog for some time now and appreciate your posts. Email communication is difficult however I would suggest the idea of moving toward a minimalist lifestyle which might offer enhanced opportunities for more meaningful engagement in what is important in your life. Thank you for your thoughtful posts.
Andy
Very interesting and impressive story which you have shared. Thanks a lot for these sharing.
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