In a job, where you wonder, a year later, what happened to that year

on-looking-alexandra-horowitz

Maria Popova (Brain Pickings) in a Conversation with Alexandra Horowitz (Cognitive Scientist): The Art of Looking: How to Live With Presence, Break the Tyranny of Productivity, and Learn to See Our Everyday Wonderland

AH: I am not encouraging productivity — and I don’t mind that that’s the case. I value the moments in my life that are productive, certainly, but only the ones that are productive and also present. So it doesn’t have to be either-or. But [I have also] spent time in a job where you then wonder, a year later, what happened to that year. And if I had bothered to sit on the subway, commuting to my office, looking — looking — I think that those moments would have been memorialized, and I would know what happened to that year…I don’t mean to be testifying against productivity per se, but I do see that it’s certainly mindless, the way that we approach there being only one route to living one’s life. And it is within us, this capacity to alter that — at any moment, even within that framework — to change your state.

MP: What’s interesting about the productivity dogma is that we live in a culture where we worship work ethic — by a very narrow definition — as some sort of this grand virtue. And we define it as showing up, day after day after day. But I often think that that’s the surest way to lull ourselves into a kind of trance of passivity, where we show up but we’re absent from our own lives. And I think one of the most beautiful things you do is you show how we can be present in our own lives, through these eleven different people and their perspectives.

AH: Thank you. You know, you are thought of as being, probably, an excessively productive person — again, in that literal sense. You have such a fertile mind — would you say you are not productive? Or, how do you achieve your productivity?

MP: For me, I read, and I hunger to know… I record, around that, my experience of understanding the world and understanding what it means to live a good life, to live a full life. Anything that I write is a byproduct of that — but that’s not the objective. So, even if it may have the appearance of “producing” something on a regular basis, it’s really about taking in, and what I put out is just … the byproduct. It’s kind of like going down the rabbit hole but digging it in the process, too.

See full post here: The Art of Looking: How to Live With Presence, Break the Tyranny of Productivity, and Learn to See Our Everyday Wonderland

See short video on Horowitz’s book On Looking. Find the book on Amazon here: On Looking.

10 thoughts on “In a job, where you wonder, a year later, what happened to that year”

  1. For a long time, my therapist banned the use of the word “productive.” I had to detach it from my identity and measure my days by the healthy practices I could accomplish. Like Horowitz, my writing is a byproduct of that now, not the end game.

  2. ‘I often think that that’s the surest way to lull ourselves into a kind of trance of passivity, where we show up but we’re absent from our own lives. And I think one of the most beautiful things you do is you show how we can be present in our own lives,’ – yes, right on the mark.

  3. I remember back about 30 years ago when I began digging into how a micro computer worked and how I might utilize these to control machines. A little out of my background and for sure any education I had aquired. When asked why I was doing this, I remember replying that it was a quest for knowledge. From that quest came a desire to learn more. When I followed the path it lead me down, I became who I am today. Taking time to read, learn and absorb is what I think this life is about. The rest will happen. Another great post David. Thanks!

  4. “…the way that we approach there being only one route to living one’s life.” This line resonated like a gong. It’s SO easy to get into one’s groove and do things the same way day after day, that “trance of passivity” as Maria calls it. Need to mix it up. I’m always astonished at how rejuvenated I feel on those days where I turn my schedule upside down–kinda like having pancakes for dinner. Gives me a burst of creativity and kicks me out of my rut. 🙂

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