I recently finished reading Breath, The New Science of a Lost Art by James Nestor and the information has been a revelation to me. I've always wondered how other people can be "in to" meditating and now, after learning the proper breathing techniques, it's become clear to me. Starting off each day with a brief meditation and breathing session works wonders for preparing my mental and physical state for the day. So I suppose it's no surprise research has found that spending just 15 minutes in reflective solitude really helps your mood and your mind:
Spending time alone can induce fear in a lot of people, which is understandable. At the same time, the difference between moments of solitude and loneliness is often misunderstood. As a psychologist, I study solitude – the time we spend alone, not interacting with other people. I started this research more than ten years ago and, up to that point, findings on young people's time alone had suggested they often experience low moods when alone.
On social media, television or in the music we listen to, we typically picture happiness as excitement, enthusiasm and energisation. From that perspective, solitude is often mistaken for loneliness. In psychology, researchers define loneliness as a distressed feeling that we experience when we don't have, or are unable to get, the kind of social connections or relationships we hope for. Solitude is different.
[...] What can we gain from solitude? In a series of experiments, I brought undergraduate students into a room to sit quietly with themselves. In some studies, I took away the students' backpacks and devices and asked them to sit with their thoughts; at other times, the students stayed in the room with books or their phones.
After just 15 minutes of solitude, I found that any strong emotions the participants might have been feeling, such as anxiety or excitement, dropped. I concluded that solitude has the capacity to bring down people's arousal levels, meaning it can be useful in situations where we feel frustrated, agitated or angry.
[...] To overcome our fear of solitude, we need to recognize its benefits and see it as a positive choice – not something that happens to us. While taking a solo trip might be a bit much for you right now, taking time out of your busy schedule for small doses of solitude might well be just what you need.
Journal References:
Related: The Most Important Skill Nobody Taught You
(Score: 5, Insightful) by stormreaver on Saturday April 29, @09:35PM (3 children)
I totally agree. If a pandemic is the only way to convince the boneheads in Management to keep us working from home 100%, then bring on the killer diseases. The risk is totally worth it.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by JoeMerchant on Sunday April 30, @02:22AM (2 children)
My house is still a semi-social place, with homeschool going on, etc. Now, the sailboat in the marina- that's solitude. Maybe two people an hour might walk by, and from inside the boat it's hard to even notice they are there, especially with the hatches closed, A/C on and music playing...
Україна досі не є частиною Росії Слава Україні🌻 https://news.stanford.edu/2023/02/17/will-russia-ukraine-war-end
(Score: 2) by Opportunist on Sunday April 30, @05:24PM (1 child)
No family here. Ok, I'm an antisocial asshole, so I have a pretty good excuse, but my home is my castle. And 20/21 it literally was. Nobody came in. Except for the occasional postal service worker who dropped off a parcel at my front door. That way it occasionally got opened even.
A/C on, music playing, my fortress is impregnable. Dare to force me back to the office and I quit the same moment.
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Monday May 01, @01:17AM
We went Instacart for groceries starting around March of 2020 that reduced our social exposure quite a bit, still doing it, it's not perfect, but the drawbacks are small compared to the forced socialization of grocery shopping in person.
I used to work at a grocery, stocking shelves. While there I noticed that the local rich didn't do their own shopping very often, they had people who did that for them. We can't afford "people" like that, but Instacart is within our means.
Україна досі не є частиною Росії Слава Україні🌻 https://news.stanford.edu/2023/02/17/will-russia-ukraine-war-end