Is a Fear of Being Bored Holding You Back?

Acknowledging the aversion can help you finally pursue mastery

Meg Panozzo
Forge

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Photo by Juan Gomez on Unsplash

We say things like “enjoy the process” and “it’s all about the journey” and “consistency is key.”

I agree with those statements. The journey of growth and learning is so important to me.

But there’s something else we need to add to the mix: accepting boredom.

James Clear first introduced me to the idea while I was training for a half-marathon a couple of years back. I was putting in the kilometres and listening to Atomic Habits. Being okay with being bored was the message I needed to get through training.

Then Covid hit. I stopped training, and the concept faded.

I constantly talk about wanting to play Chopin’s Fantaisie-Impromptu on the keyboard. A famous, difficult piece. You can’t master it without dedicated hours of practice. And yet there I was, playing for a couple of bars and then reaching for my phone as soon it got boring.

After realising that my attention had been diverted for the tenth or twentieth time and feeling a familiar surge of self-critical frustration, the light bulb went off.

At even the first hint of boredom, my attention would bounce.

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