We check our phones while waiting in line, scroll through feeds during commercial breaks, refresh our inboxes when conversations lag. What are we running from in these small moments of silence?
Boredom has become something to fix, a void to fill immediately. Yet what if these gaps aren't deficiencies but opportunities? The ancient philosophers sought solitude deliberately. They understood that the mind needs empty space the way lungs need air.
When we eliminate every pause, we eliminate the possibility of something unexpected emerging from within. Insights don't arrive on demand—they surface when there's room for them. The solution to a problem often appears while walking, showering, staring out a window. Not because we've stopped thinking, but because we've stopped forcing it.