"If you can wait and not be tired of waiting." According to Rudyard Kipling, that was part of being a man. My sense is we need to strike a balance between productivity, entertainment, and thinking. I'm not ready to "raw dog" a flight (a new trend of staring straight ahead for an entire airplane flight), but I do consciously try to put do…
"If you can wait and not be tired of waiting." According to Rudyard Kipling, that was part of being a man. My sense is we need to strike a balance between productivity, entertainment, and thinking. I'm not ready to "raw dog" a flight (a new trend of staring straight ahead for an entire airplane flight), but I do consciously try to put down my phone sometimes when I am on the train or waiting for something to stay within my thoughts versus always trying to make sure I am entertained. My unscientific view is that our brain goes to mush if it constantly requires entertainment versus thinking for itself or gets worn out if it is always being productive.
"If you can wait and not be tired of waiting." According to Rudyard Kipling, that was part of being a man. My sense is we need to strike a balance between productivity, entertainment, and thinking. I'm not ready to "raw dog" a flight (a new trend of staring straight ahead for an entire airplane flight), but I do consciously try to put down my phone sometimes when I am on the train or waiting for something to stay within my thoughts versus always trying to make sure I am entertained. My unscientific view is that our brain goes to mush if it constantly requires entertainment versus thinking for itself or gets worn out if it is always being productive.