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A Waste of Time or a Lesson?

Wasting time comes in many guises. There’s time spent on “frivolous” activities like watching TV or playing games on your phone. There’s time spent on projects that don’t go as planned or have unexpected results (lace shawl I can’t seem to knit, I’m looking at you). There’s time spent mucking about when you are trying to create something new that results in nothing but a stack of awful sketches or pages of writing that you can’t actually use.

Our society isn’t at all friendly to the idea of wasting time. Every minute should be productive. We should have something to show for our hours. If someone asks you what you accomplished today, the last thing you want to say is “nothing.” But it’s unrealistic to expect to be productive every second of every day.

Any complicated activity requires skill, and to develop skill we must practice. To create, we must explore. Practice and exploration can look unproductive and wasteful, but they’re a necessary part of the process. We still come up against “time wasters” that are hard to justify, but we just need to look at them in a different way.

Nothing is a waste of time if you use the experience wisely.

Auguste Rodin

After I found this quote, I realized all I needed to do to keep any activity from being wasteful was to discover what exactly I got from it. What did I learn? Here’s what I’ve discovered.

So all these things that seem like a waste of time are not. They hold lessons for us, and if we look, we will discover their true value.

What do you do that feels like a waste of your time? Have you learned important lessons from “frivolous” activities?

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