Hello again, dear reader. Now I know, yesterday we
pontificated on the life lessons that can be learned from Ray Bradbury's
"Fahrenheit 451" but today I thought we would shift back to a sort of
"time management perspective." I have recently been reading a lot of
science fiction space travel books in my spare time. And these books often talk
about time in a different sense than we do on earth, because the days are often
longer (supposedly) on planets like Mars or Pluto (which by the way isn't a
planet anymore). And they often talk about how much more they can accomplish
during the course of a day on Mars. Rather than the standard 24 hour clock used
on earth. So thinking about the possibility of time being stretched or expanded
guide me thinking about humanity's ability to make the most out of life in a
standard 24 hour period of time. And now understanding the 24-hour clock could
help humanity make the most of the day and live life to its fullest potential,
and this conversation is the best information I could find scouring historic
documents and scholarly journals on the best way to make the most out of the
24-hour clock.
It should be noted dear reader, that Mr. Arnold
Bennett is a product of his time and therefore is of course most likely writing
from a privileged white male perspective not to mention that because he is a
British subject. The spelling in this conversation will be in the Queen's
English for the most part, as I did not change any of the conversation,
although I did notice some sentences had been added. I imagine this is to
correct misspellings or unintelligible words. However this does not mean that
he is "manly" lessons cannot be applied to the whole of humanity.
Hopefully by the end of this conversation, you dear reader will understand how
to appreciate and make the most out of a 24-hour day...
Side
note to dear reader: As you look back on the year that has just past, do you
feel as though you spent another 12 months merely existing instead of
truly living? Do you often go to bed at night with an anxious, sinking
feeling that you wasted away another precious day of your limited time here on
earth? A very interesting, little old book addressed this very concern better
than anything else I have found so far. Published in 1910 and written by Arnold
Bennett, How
to Live on Twenty-Fours Hours a Day describes and diagnoses the root of the
problem and offers a program for overcoming it. Bennett has some very
particular opinions about what should constitute this program, but you need not
follow them to a T; the important part is committing to carve out some time
each day to do things that will really enrich your life and help you progress
as a human being.
This
little book takes about 30 minutes to read, and is so incisive and clever that
it moves along very quickly and enjoyably. It is truly just as relevant today
as it was a century ago. As Bennett says, time is the most precious
resource you have, and investing a half hour in reading this will prove
incredibly worthwhile.
How to Live on
Twenty-Four Hours a Day
By Arnold Bennett
I
THE DAILY MIRACLE
THE DAILY MIRACLE
“Yes,
he’s one of those men that don’t know how to manage. Good situation. Regular
income. Quite enough for luxuries as well as needs. Not really extravagant. And
yet the fellow’s always in difficulties. Somehow he gets nothing out of his
money. Excellent flat—half empty! Always looks as if he’d had the brokers in.
New suit—old hat! Magnificent necktie—baggy trousers! Asks you to dinner: cut
glass—bad mutton, or Turkish coffee—cracked cup! He can’t understand it.
Explanation simply is that he fritters his income away. Wish I had the half of
it! I’d show him—”
So
we have most of us criticised, at one time or another, in our superior way.
We
are nearly all chancellors of the exchequer: it is the pride of the moment.
Newspapers are full of articles explaining how to live on such-and-such a sum,
and these articles provoke a correspondence whose violence proves the interest
they excite. Recently, in a daily organ, a battle raged round the question
whether a woman can exist nicely in the country on L85 a year. I have seen an
essay, “How to live on eight shillings a week.” But I have never seen an essay,
“How to live on twenty-four hours a day.” Yet it has been said that time is
money. That proverb understates the case. Time is a great deal more than money.
If you have time you can obtain money—usually. But though you have the wealth
of a cloak-room attendant at the Carlton Hotel, you cannot buy yourself a
minute more time than I have, or the cat by the fire has.
Philosophers
have explained space. They have not explained time. It is the inexplicable raw
material of everything. With it, all is possible; without it, nothing. The
supply of time is truly a daily miracle, an affair genuinely astonishing when
one examines it. You wake up in the morning, and lo! your purse is magically
filled with twenty-four hours of the unmanufactured tissue of the universe of
your life! It is yours. It is the most precious of possessions. A highly
singular commodity, showered upon you in a manner as singular as the commodity
itself!
For
remark! No one can take it from you. It is unstealable. And no one receives
either more or less than you receive.
Talk
about an ideal democracy! In the realm of time there is no aristocracy of
wealth, and no aristocracy of intellect. Genius is never rewarded by even an
extra hour a day. And there is no punishment. Waste your infinitely precious
commodity as much as you will, and the supply will never be withheld from you.
No mysterious power will say:—”This man is a fool, if not a knave. He does not
deserve time; he shall be cut off at the meter.” It is more certain than
consols, and payment of income is not affected by Sundays. Moreover, you cannot
draw on the future. Impossible to get into debt! You can only waste the passing
moment. You cannot waste to-morrow; it is kept for you. You cannot waste the
next hour; it is kept for you.
I
said the affair was a miracle. Is it not?
You
have to live on this twenty-four hours of daily time. Out of it you have to
spin health, pleasure, money, content, respect, and the evolution of your
immortal soul. Its right use, its most effective use, is a matter of the
highest urgency and of the most thrilling actuality. All depends on that. Your
happiness—the elusive prize that you are all clutching for, my friends!—depends
on that. Strange that the newspapers, so enterprising and up-to-date as they
are, are not full of “How to live on a given income of time,” instead of “How
to live on a given income of money”! Money is far commoner than time. When one
reflects, one perceives that money is just about the commonest thing there is.
It encumbers the earth in gross heaps.
If
one can’t contrive to live on a certain income of money, one earns a little
more—or steals it, or advertises for it. One doesn’t necessarily muddle one’s
life because one can’t quite manage on a thousand pounds a year; one braces the
muscles and makes it guineas, and balances the budget. But if one cannot
arrange that an income of twenty-four hours a day shall exactly cover all
proper items of expenditure, one does muddle one’s life definitely. The supply
of time, though gloriously regular, is cruelly restricted.
Which
of us lives on twenty-four hours a day? And when I say “lives,” I do not mean
exists, nor “muddles through.” Which of us is free from that uneasy feeling
that the “great spending departments” of his daily life are not managed as they
ought to be? Which of us is quite sure that his fine suit is not surmounted by
a shameful hat, or that in attending to the crockery he has forgotten the
quality of the food? Which of us is not saying to himself—which of us has not
been saying to himself all his life: “I shall alter that when I have a little
more time”?
We
never shall have any more time. We have, and we have always had, all the time
there is. It is the realisation of this profound and neglected truth (which, by
the way, I have not discovered) that has led me to the minute practical
examination of daily time-expenditure.
II
THE DESIRE TO EXCEED ONE’S PROGRAMME
THE DESIRE TO EXCEED ONE’S PROGRAMME
“But,”
someone may remark, with the English disregard of everything except the point,
“what is he driving at with his twenty-four hours a day? I have no difficulty
in living on twenty-four hours a day. I do all that I want to do, and still
find time to go in for newspaper competitions. Surely it is a simple affair,
knowing that one has only twenty-four hours a day, to content one’s self with
twenty-four hours a day!”
To
you, my dear sir, I present my excuses and apologies. You are precisely the man
that I have been wishing to meet for about forty years. Will you kindly send me
your name and address, and state your charge for telling me how you do it?
Instead of me talking to you, you ought to be talking to me. Please come
forward. That you exist, I am convinced, and that I have not yet encountered
you is my loss. Meanwhile, until you appear, I will continue to chat with my
companions in distress—that innumerable band of souls who are haunted, more or
less painfully, by the feeling that the years slip by, and slip by, and slip
by, and that they have not yet been able to get their lives into proper working
order.
If
we analyse that feeling, we shall perceive it to be, primarily, one of
uneasiness, of expectation, of looking forward, of aspiration. It is a source
of constant discomfort, for it behaves like a skeleton at the feast of all our
enjoyments. We go to the theatre and laugh; but between the acts it raises a
skinny finger at us. We rush violently for the last train, and while we are
cooling a long age on the platform waiting for the last train, it promenades
its bones up and down by our side and inquires: “O man, what hast thou done
with thy youth? What art thou doing with thine age?” You may urge that this
feeling of continuous looking forward, of aspiration, is part of life itself,
and inseparable from life itself. True!
But
there are degrees. A man may desire to go to Mecca. His conscience tells him
that he ought to go to Mecca. He fares forth, either by the aid of Cook’s, or
unassisted; he may probably never reach Mecca; he may drown before he gets to
Port Said; he may perish ingloriously on the coast of the Red Sea; his desire
may remain eternally frustrate. Unfulfilled aspiration may always trouble him.
But he will not be tormented in the same way as the man who, desiring to reach
Mecca, and harried by the desire to reach Mecca, never leaves Brixton.
It
is something to have left Brixton. Most of us have not left Brixton. We have
not even taken a cab to Ludgate Circus and inquired from Cook’s the price of a
conducted tour. And our excuse to ourselves is that there are only twenty-four
hours in the day.
If
we further analyse our vague, uneasy aspiration, we shall, I think, see that it
springs from a fixed idea that we ought to do something in addition to those
things which we are loyally and morally obliged to do. We are obliged, by
various codes written and unwritten, to maintain ourselves and our families (if
any) in health and comfort, to pay our debts, to save, to increase our
prosperity by increasing our efficiency. A task sufficiently difficult! A task
which very few of us achieve! A task often beyond our skill! Yet, if we succeed
in it, as we sometimes do, we are not satisfied; the skeleton is still with us.
And
even when we realise that the task is beyond our skill, that our powers cannot
cope with it, we feel that we should be less discontented if we gave to our
powers, already overtaxed, something still further to do.
And
such is, indeed, the fact. The wish to accomplish something outside their
formal programme is common to all men who in the course of evolution have risen
past a certain level.
Until
an effort is made to satisfy that wish, the sense of uneasy waiting for
something to start which has not started will remain to disturb the peace of
the soul. That wish has been called by many names. It is one form of the
universal desire for knowledge. And it is so strong that men whose whole lives
have been given to the systematic acquirement of knowledge have been driven by
it to overstep the limits of their programme in search of still more knowledge.
Even Herbert Spencer, in my opinion the greatest mind that ever lived, was
often forced by it into agreeable little backwaters of inquiry.
I
imagine that in the majority of people who are conscious of the wish to
live—that is to say, people who have intellectual curiosity—the aspiration to
exceed formal programmes takes a literary shape. They would like to embark on a
course of reading. Decidedly the British people are becoming more and more
literary. But I would point out that literature by no means comprises the whole
field of knowledge, and that the disturbing thirst to improve one’s self—to
increase one’s knowledge—may well be slaked quite apart from literature. With
the various ways of slaking I shall deal later. Here I merely point out to
those who have no natural sympathy with literature that literature is not the
only well.
III
PRECAUTIONS BEFORE BEGINNING
PRECAUTIONS BEFORE BEGINNING
Now
that I have succeeded (if succeeded I have) in persuading you to admit to
yourself that you are constantly haunted by a suppressed dissatisfaction with
your own arrangement of your daily life; and that the primal cause of that
inconvenient dissatisfaction is the feeling that you are every day leaving
undone something which you would like to do, and which, indeed, you are always
hoping to do when you have “more time”; and now that I have drawn your
attention to the glaring, dazzling truth that you never will have “more time,”
since you already have all the time there is—you expect me to let you into some
wonderful secret by which you may at any rate approach the ideal of a perfect
arrangement of the day, and by which, therefore, that haunting, unpleasant,
daily disappointment of things left undone will be got rid of!
I
have found no such wonderful secret. Nor do I expect to find it, nor do I expect
that anyone else will ever find it. It is undiscovered. When you first began to
gather my drift, perhaps there was a resurrection of hope in your breast.
Perhaps you said to yourself, “This man will show me an easy, unfatiguing way
of doing what I have so long in vain wished to do.” Alas, no! The fact is that
there is no easy way, no royal road. The path to Mecca is extremely hard and
stony, and the worst of it is that you never quite get there after all.
The
most important preliminary to the task of arranging one’s life so that one may
live fully and comfortably within one’s daily budget of twenty-four hours is
the calm realisation of the extreme difficulty of the task, of the sacrifices
and the endless effort which it demands. I cannot too strongly insist on this.
If
you imagine that you will be able to achieve your ideal by ingeniously planning
out a time-table with a pen on a piece of paper, you had better give up hope at
once. If you are not prepared for discouragements and disillusions; if you will
not be content with a small result for a big effort, then do not begin. Lie
down again and resume the uneasy doze which you call your existence.
It
is very sad, is it not, very depressing and sombre? And yet I think it is
rather fine, too, this necessity for the tense bracing of the will before
anything worth doing can be done. I rather like it myself. I feel it to be the
chief thing that differentiates me from the cat by the fire.
“Well,”
you say, “assume that I am braced for the battle. Assume that I have carefully
weighed and comprehended your ponderous remarks; how do I begin?” Dear sir, you
simply begin. There is no magic method of beginning. If a man standing on the
edge of a swimming-bath and wanting to jump into the cold water should ask you,
“How do I begin to jump?” you would merely reply, “Just jump. Take hold of your
nerves, and jump.”
As
I have previously said, the chief beauty about the constant supply of time is
that you cannot waste it in advance. The next year, the next day, the next hour
are lying ready for you, as perfect, as unspoilt, as if you had never wasted or
misapplied a single moment in all your career. Which fact is very gratifying
and reassuring. You can turn over a new leaf every hour if you choose.
Therefore no object is served in waiting till next week, or even until
to-morrow. You may fancy that the water will be warmer next week. It won’t. It
will be colder.
But
before you begin, let me murmur a few words of warning in your private ear.
Let
me principally warn you against your own ardour. Ardour in well-doing is a
misleading and a treacherous thing. It cries out loudly for employment; you
can’t satisfy it at first; it wants more and more; it is eager to move
mountains and divert the course of rivers. It isn’t content till it perspires.
And then, too often, when it feels the perspiration on its brow, it wearies all
of a sudden and dies, without even putting itself to the trouble of saying,
“I’ve had enough of this.”
Beware
of undertaking too much at the start. Be content with quite a little. Allow for
accidents. Allow for human nature, especially your own.
A
failure or so, in itself, would not matter, if it did not incur a loss of
self-esteem and of self-confidence. But just as nothing succeeds like success,
so nothing fails like failure. Most people who are ruined are ruined by
attempting too much. Therefore, in setting out on the immense enterprise of
living fully and comfortably within the narrow limits of twenty-four hours a
day, let us avoid at any cost the risk of an early failure. I will not agree
that, in this business at any rate, a glorious failure is better than a petty
success. I am all for the petty success. A glorious failure leads to nothing; a
petty success may lead to a success that is not petty.
So
let us begin to examine the budget of the day’s time. You say your day is
already full to overflowing. How? You actually spend in earning your
livelihood—how much? Seven hours, on the average? And in actual sleep, seven? I
will add two hours, and be generous. And I will defy you to account to me on
the spur of the moment for the other eight hours.
IV
THE CAUSE OF THE TROUBLES
THE CAUSE OF THE TROUBLES
In
order to come to grips at once with the question of time-expenditure in all its
actuality, I must choose an individual case for examination. I can only deal
with one case, and that case cannot be the average case, because there is no
such case as the average case, just as there is no such man as the average man.
Every man and every man’s case is special.
But
if I take the case of a Londoner who works in an office, whose office hours are
from ten to six, and who spends fifty minutes morning and night in travelling
between his house door and his office door, I shall have got as near to the
average as facts permit. There are men who have to work longer for a living,
but there are others who do not have to work so long.
Fortunately
the financial side of existence does not interest us here; for our present
purpose the clerk at a pound a week is exactly as well off as the millionaire
in Carlton House-terrace.
Now
the great and profound mistake which my typical man makes in regard to his day
is a mistake of general attitude, a mistake which vitiates and weakens
two-thirds of his energies and interests. In the majority of instances he does
not precisely feel a passion for his business; at best he does not dislike it.
He begins his business functions with reluctance, as late as he can, and he
ends them with joy, as early as he can. And his engines while he is engaged in
his business are seldom at their full “h.p.” (I know that I shall be accused by
angry readers of traducing the city worker; but I am pretty thoroughly
acquainted with the City, and I stick to what I say.)
Yet
in spite of all this he persists in looking upon those hours from ten to six as
“the day,” to which the ten hours preceding them and the six hours following
them are nothing but a prologue and epilogue. Such an attitude, unconscious
though it be, of course kills his interest in the odd sixteen hours, with the
result that, even if he does not waste them, he does not count them; he regards
them simply as margin.
This
general attitude is utterly illogical and unhealthy, since it formally gives
the central prominence to a patch of time and a bunch of activities which the
man’s one idea is to “get through” and have “done with.” If a man makes
two-thirds of his existence subservient to one-third, for which admittedly he
has no absolutely feverish zest, how can he hope to live fully and completely?
He cannot.
If
my typical man wishes to live fully and completely he must, in his mind,
arrange a day within a day. And this inner day, a Chinese box in a larger
Chinese box, must begin at 6 p.m. and end at 10 a.m. It is a day of sixteen
hours; and during all these sixteen hours he has nothing whatever to do but
cultivate his body and his soul and his fellow men. During those sixteen hours
he is free; he is not a wage-earner; he is not preoccupied with monetary cares;
he is just as good as a man with a private income. This must be his attitude.
And his attitude is all important. His success in life (much more important
than the amount of estate upon what his executors will have to pay estate duty)
depends on it.
What?
You say that full energy given to those sixteen hours will lessen the value of
the business eight? Not so. On the contrary, it will assuredly increase the
value of the business eight. One of the chief things which my typical man has
to learn is that the mental faculties are capable of a continuous hard
activity; they do not tire like an arm or a leg. All they want is change—not
rest, except in sleep.
I
shall now examine the typical man’s current method of employing the sixteen
hours that are entirely his, beginning with his uprising. I will merely
indicate things which he does and which I think he ought not to do, postponing
my suggestions for “planting” the times which I shall have cleared—as a settler
clears spaces in a forest.
In
justice to him I must say that he wastes very little time before he leaves the
house in the morning at 9:10. In too many houses he gets up at nine, breakfasts
between 9:07 and 9:09.5, and then bolts. But immediately he bangs the front
door his mental faculties, which are tireless, become idle. He walks to the
station in a condition of mental coma. Arrived there, he usually has to wait
for the train. On hundreds of suburban stations every morning you see men
calmly strolling up and down platforms while railway companies unblushingly rob
them of time, which is more than money. Hundreds of thousands of hours are thus
lost every day simply because my typical man thinks so little of time that it
has never occurred to him to take quite easy precautions against the risk of
its loss.
He
has a solid coin of time to spend every day—call it a sovereign. He must get
change for it, and in getting change he is content to lose heavily.
Supposing
that in selling him a ticket the company said, “We will change you a sovereign,
but we shall charge you three halfpence for doing so,” what would my typical
man exclaim? Yet that is the equivalent of what the company does when it robs
him of five minutes twice a day.
You
say I am dealing with minutiae. I am. And later on I will justify myself.
Now
will you kindly buy your paper and step into the train?
V
TENNIS AND THE IMMORTAL SOUL
TENNIS AND THE IMMORTAL SOUL
You
get into the morning train with your newspaper, and you calmly and majestically
give yourself up to your newspaper. You do not hurry. You know you have at
least half an hour of security in front of you. As your glance lingers idly at
the advertisements of shipping and of songs on the outer pages, your air is the
air of a leisured man, wealthy in time, of a man from some planet where there
are a hundred and twenty-four hours a day instead of twenty-four. I am an
impassioned reader of newspapers. I read five English and two French dailies,
and the news-agents alone know how many weeklies, regularly. I am obliged to
mention this personal fact lest I should be accused of a prejudice against
newspapers when I say that I object to the reading of newspapers in the morning
train. Newspapers are produced with rapidity, to be read with rapidity. There
is no place in my daily programme for newspapers. I read them as I may in odd
moments. But I do read them. The idea of devoting to them thirty or forty
consecutive minutes of wonderful solitude (for nowhere can one more perfectly
immerse one’s self in one’s self than in a compartment full of silent,
withdrawn, smoking males) is to me repugnant. I cannot possibly allow you to
scatter priceless pearls of time with such Oriental lavishness. You are not the
Shah of time. Let me respectfully remind you that you have no more time than I
have. No newspaper reading in trains! I have already “put by” about
three-quarters of an hour for use.
Now
you reach your office. And I abandon you there till six o’clock. I am aware
that you have nominally an hour (often in reality an hour and a half) in the
midst of the day, less than half of which time is given to eating. But I will
leave you all that to spend as you choose. You may read your newspapers then.
I
meet you again as you emerge from your office. You are pale and tired. At any
rate, your wife says you are pale, and you give her to understand that you are
tired. During the journey home you have been gradually working up the tired
feeling. The tired feeling hangs heavy over the mighty suburbs of London like a
virtuous and melancholy cloud, particularly in winter. You don’t eat
immediately on your arrival home. But in about an hour or so you feel as if you
could sit up and take a little nourishment. And you do. Then you smoke,
seriously; you see friends; you potter; you play cards; you flirt with a book;
you note that old age is creeping on; you take a stroll; you caress the piano….
By Jove! a quarter past eleven. You then devote quite forty minutes to thinking
about going to bed; and it is conceivable that you are acquainted with a
genuinely good whisky. At last you go to bed, exhausted by the day’s work. Six
hours, probably more, have gone since you left the office—gone like a dream,
gone like magic, unaccountably gone!
That
is a fair sample case. But you say: “It’s all very well for you to talk. A man is
tired. A man must see his friends. He can’t always be on the stretch.” Just so.
But when you arrange to go to the theatre (especially with a pretty woman) what
happens? You rush to the suburbs; you spare no toil to make yourself glorious
in fine raiment; you rush back to town in another train; you keep yourself on
the stretch for four hours, if not five; you take her home; you take yourself
home. You don’t spend three-quarters of an hour in “thinking about” going to
bed. You go. Friends and fatigue have equally been forgotten, and the evening
has seemed so exquisitely long (or perhaps too short)! And do you remember that
time when you were persuaded to sing in the chorus of the amateur operatic
society, and slaved two hours every other night for three months? Can you deny
that when you have something definite to look forward to at eventide, something
that is to employ all your energy—the thought of that something gives a glow
and a more intense vitality to the whole day?
What
I suggest is that at six o’clock you look facts in the face and admit that you
are not tired (because you are not, you know), and that you arrange your
evening so that it is not cut in the middle by a meal. By so doing you will
have a clear expanse of at least three hours. I do not suggest that you should
employ three hours every night of your life in using up your mental energy. But
I do suggest that you might, for a commencement, employ an hour and a half
every other evening in some important and consecutive cultivation of the mind.
You will still be left with three evenings for friends, bridge, tennis,
domestic scenes, odd reading, pipes, gardening, pottering, and prize
competitions. You will still have the terrific wealth of forty-five hours
between 2 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. Monday. If you persevere you will soon want
to pass four evenings, and perhaps five, in some sustained endeavour to be
genuinely alive. And you will fall out of that habit of muttering to yourself
at 11.15 p.m., “Time to be thinking about going to bed.” The man who begins to
go to bed forty minutes before he opens his bedroom door is bored; that is to
say, he is not living.
But
remember, at the start, those ninety nocturnal minutes thrice a week must be
the most important minutes in the ten thousand and eighty. They must be sacred,
quite as sacred as a dramatic rehearsal or a tennis match. Instead of saying,
“Sorry I can’t see you, old chap, but I have to run off to the tennis club,”
you must say, “…but I have to work.” This, I admit, is intensely difficult to
say. Tennis is so much more urgent than the immortal soul.
VI
REMEMBER HUMAN NATURE
REMEMBER HUMAN NATURE
I
have incidentally mentioned the vast expanse of forty-four hours between
leaving business at 2 p.m. on Saturday and returning to business at 10 a.m. on
Monday. And here I must touch on the point whether the week should consist of
six days or of seven. For many years—in fact, until I was approaching forty—my
own week consisted of seven days. I was constantly being informed by older and
wiser people that more work, more genuine living, could be got out of six days
than out of seven.
And
it is certainly true that now, with one day in seven in which I follow no
programme and make no effort save what the caprice of the moment dictates, I
appreciate intensely the moral value of a weekly rest. Nevertheless, had I my
life to arrange over again, I would do again as I have done. Only those who
have lived at the full stretch seven days a week for a long time can appreciate
the full beauty of a regular recurring idleness. Moreover, I am ageing. And it
is a question of age. In cases of abounding youth and exceptional energy and
desire for effort I should say unhesitatingly: Keep going, day in, day out.
But
in the average case I should say: Confine your formal programme
(super-programme, I mean) to six days a week. If you find yourself wishing to
extend it, extend it, but only in proportion to your wish; and count the time
extra as a windfall, not as regular income, so that you can return to a six-day
programme without the sensation of being poorer, of being a backslider.
Let
us now see where we stand. So far we have marked for saving out of the waste of
days, half an hour at least on six mornings a week, and one hour and a half on
three evenings a week. Total, seven hours and a half a week.
I
propose to be content with that seven hours and a half for the present. “What?”
you cry. “You pretend to show us how to live, and you only deal with seven
hours and a half out of a hundred and sixty-eight! Are you going to perform a
miracle with your seven hours and a half?” Well, not to mince the matter, I
am—if you will kindly let me! That is to say, I am going to ask you to attempt
an experience which, while perfectly natural and explicable, has all the air of
a miracle. My contention is that the full use of those seven-and-a-half hours
will quicken the whole life of the week, add zest to it, and increase the
interest which you feel in even the most banal occupations. You practise
physical exercises for a mere ten minutes morning and evening, and yet you are
not astonished when your physical health and strength are beneficially affected
every hour of the day, and your whole physical outlook changed. Why should you
be astonished that an average of over an hour a day given to the mind should
permanently and completely enliven the whole activity of the mind?
More
time might assuredly be given to the cultivation of one’s self. And in
proportion as the time was longer the results would be greater. But I prefer to
begin with what looks like a trifling effort.
It
is not really a trifling effort, as those will discover who have yet to essay
it. To “clear” even seven hours and a half from the jungle is passably difficult.
For some sacrifice has to be made. One may have spent one’s time badly, but one
did spend it; one did do something with it, however ill-advised that something
may have been. To do something else means a change of habits.
And
habits are the very dickens to change! Further, any change, even a change for
the better, is always accompanied by drawbacks and discomforts. If you imagine
that you will be able to devote seven hours and a half a week to serious,
continuous effort, and still live your old life, you are mistaken. I repeat
that some sacrifice, and an immense deal of volition, will be necessary. And it
is because I know the difficulty, it is because I know the almost disastrous
effect of failure in such an enterprise, that I earnestly advise a very humble
beginning. You must safeguard your self-respect. Self-respect is at the root of
all purposefulness, and a failure in an enterprise deliberately planned deals a
desperate wound at one’s self-respect. Hence I iterate and reiterate: Start
quietly, unostentatiously.
When
you have conscientiously given seven hours and a half a week to the cultivation
of your vitality for three months—then you may begin to sing louder and tell
yourself what wondrous things you are capable of doing.
Before
coming to the method of using the indicated hours, I have one final suggestion
to make. That is, as regards the evenings, to allow much more than an hour and
a half in which to do the work of an hour and a half. Remember the chance of
accidents. Remember human nature. And give yourself, say, from 9 to 11:30 for
your task of ninety minutes.
VII
CONTROLLING THE MIND
CONTROLLING THE MIND
People
say: “One can’t help one’s thoughts.” But one can. The control of the thinking
machine is perfectly possible. And since nothing whatever happens to us outside
our own brain; since nothing hurts us or gives us pleasure except within the
brain, the supreme importance of being able to control what goes on in that
mysterious brain is patent. This idea is one of the oldest platitudes, but it
is a platitude whose profound truth and urgency most people live and die
without realising. People complain of the lack of power to concentrate, not
witting that they may acquire the power, if they choose.
And
without the power to concentrate—that is to say, without the power to dictate
to the brain its task and to ensure obedience—true life is impossible. Mind
control is the first element of a full existence.
Hence,
it seems to me, the first business of the day should be to put the mind through
its paces. You look after your body, inside and out; you run grave danger in
hacking hairs off your skin; you employ a whole army of individuals, from the
milkman to the pig-killer, to enable you to bribe your stomach into decent
behaviour. Why not devote a little attention to the far more delicate machinery
of the mind, especially as you will require no extraneous aid? It is for this
portion of the art and craft of living that I have reserved the time from the
moment of quitting your door to the moment of arriving at your office.
“What?
I am to cultivate my mind in the street, on the platform, in the train, and in
the crowded street again?” Precisely. Nothing simpler! No tools required! Not
even a book. Nevertheless, the affair is not easy.
When
you leave your house, concentrate your mind on a subject (no matter what, to
begin with). You will not have gone ten yards before your mind has skipped away
under your very eyes and is larking round the corner with another subject.
Bring
it back by the scruff of the neck. Ere you have reached the station you will
have brought it back about forty times. Do not despair. Continue. Keep it up.
You will succeed. You cannot by any chance fail if you persevere. It is idle to
pretend that your mind is incapable of concentration. Do you not remember that
morning when you received a disquieting letter which demanded a very
carefully-worded answer? How you kept your mind steadily on the subject of the
answer, without a second’s intermission, until you reached your office;
whereupon you instantly sat down and wrote the answer? That was a case in which
you were roused by circumstances to such a degree of vitality that you
were able to dominate your mind like a tyrant. You would have no trifling. You
insisted that its work should be done, and its work was done.
By
the regular practice of concentration (as to which there is no secret—save the
secret of perseverance) you can tyrannise over your mind (which is not the
highest part of you) every hour of the day, and in no matter what place.
The exercise is a very convenient one. If you got into your morning train with
a pair of dumb-bells for your muscles or an encyclopaedia in ten volumes for
your learning, you would probably excite remark. But as you walk in the street,
or sit in the corner of the compartment behind a pipe, or “strap-hang” on the
Subterranean, who is to know that you are engaged in the most important of
daily acts? What asinine boor can laugh at you?
I
do not care what you concentrate on, so long as you concentrate. It is the mere
disciplining of the thinking machine that counts. But still, you may as well
kill two birds with one stone, and concentrate on something useful. I
suggest—it is only a suggestion—a little chapter of Marcus Aurelius or
Epictetus.
Do
not, I beg, shy at their names. For myself, I know nothing more “actual,” more
bursting with plain common-sense, applicable to the daily life of plain persons
like you and me (who hate airs, pose, and nonsense) than Marcus Aurelius or
Epictetus. Read a chapter—and so short they are, the chapters!—in the evening
and concentrate on it the next morning. You will see.
Yes,
my friend, it is useless for you to try to disguise the fact. I can hear your
brain like a telephone at my ear. You are saying to yourself: “This fellow was
doing pretty well up to his seventh chapter. He had begun to interest me
faintly. But what he says about thinking in trains, and concentration, and so
on, is not for me. It may be well enough for some folks, but it isn’t in my
line.”
It
is for you, I passionately repeat; it is for you. Indeed, you are the very man
I am aiming at.
Throw
away the suggestion, and you throw away the most precious suggestion that was
ever offered to you. It is not my suggestion. It is the suggestion of the most
sensible, practical, hard-headed men who have walked the earth. I only give it
you at second-hand. Try it. Get your mind in hand. And see how the process
cures half the evils of life—especially worry, that miserable, avoidable,
shameful disease—worry!
VIII
THE REFLECTIVE MOOD
THE REFLECTIVE MOOD
The
exercise of concentrating the mind (to which at least half an hour a day should
be given) is a mere preliminary, like scales on the piano. Having acquired
power over that most unruly member of one’s complex organism, one has naturally
to put it to the yoke. Useless to possess an obedient mind unless one profits
to the furthest possible degree by its obedience. A prolonged primary course of
study is indicated.
Now
as to what this course of study should be there cannot be any question; there
never has been any question. All the sensible people of all ages are agreed
upon it. And it is not literature, nor is it any other art, nor is it history,
nor is it any science. It is the study of one’s self. Man, know thyself. These
words are so hackneyed that verily I blush to write them. Yet they must be
written, for they need to be written. (I take back my blush, being ashamed of
it.) Man, know thyself. I say it out loud. The phrase is one of those phrases
with which everyone is familiar, of which everyone acknowledges the value, and
which only the most sagacious put into practice. I don’t know why. I am
entirely convinced that what is more than anything else lacking in the life of
the average well-intentioned man of to-day is the reflective mood.
We
do not reflect. I mean that we do not reflect upon genuinely important things;
upon the problem of our happiness, upon the main direction in which we are
going, upon what life is giving to us, upon the share which reason has (or has
not) in determining our actions, and upon the relation between our principles
and our conduct.
And
yet you are in search of happiness, are you not? Have you discovered it?
The
chances are that you have not. The chances are that you have already come to
believe that happiness is unattainable. But men have attained it. And they have
attained it by realising that happiness does not spring from the procuring of
physical or mental pleasure, but from the development of reason and the
adjustment of conduct to principles.
I
suppose that you will not have the audacity to deny this. And if you admit it,
and still devote no part of your day to the deliberate consideration of your
reason, principles, and conduct, you admit also that while striving for a
certain thing you are regularly leaving undone the one act which is necessary to
the attainment of that thing.
Now,
shall I blush, or will you?
Do
not fear that I mean to thrust certain principles upon your attention. I care
not (in this place) what your principles are. Your principles may induce you to
believe in the righteousness of burglary. I don’t mind. All I urge is that a
life in which conduct does not fairly well accord with principles is a silly
life; and that conduct can only be made to accord with principles by means of
daily examination, reflection, and resolution. What leads to the permanent
sorrowfulness of burglars is that their principles are contrary to burglary. If
they genuinely believed in the moral excellence of burglary, penal servitude
would simply mean so many happy years for them; all martyrs are happy, because
their conduct and their principles agree.
As
for reason (which makes conduct, and is not unconnected with the making of
principles), it plays a far smaller part in our lives than we fancy. We are
supposed to be reasonable but we are much more instinctive than reasonable. And
the less we reflect, the less reasonable we shall be. The next time you get
cross with the waiter because your steak is over-cooked, ask reason to step
into the cabinet-room of your mind, and consult her. She will probably tell you
that the waiter did not cook the steak, and had no control over the cooking of
the steak; and that even if he alone was to blame, you accomplished nothing
good by getting cross; you merely lost your dignity, looked a fool in the eyes
of sensible men, and soured the waiter, while producing no effect whatever on
the steak.
The
result of this consultation with reason (for which she makes no charge) will be
that when once more your steak is over-cooked you will treat the waiter as a
fellow-creature, remain quite calm in a kindly spirit, and politely insist on
having a fresh steak. The gain will be obvious and solid.
In
the formation or modification of principles, and the practice of conduct, much
help can be derived from printed books (issued at sixpence each and upwards). I
mentioned in my last chapter Marcus Aurelius and Epictetus. Certain even more
widely known works will occur at once to the memory. I may also mention Pascal,
La Bruyere, and Emerson. For myself, you do not catch me travelling without my
Marcus Aurelius. Yes, books are valuable. But not reading of books will take
the place of a daily, candid, honest examination of what one has recently done,
and what one is about to do—of a steady looking at one’s self in the face
(disconcerting though the sight may be).
When
shall this important business be accomplished? The solitude of the evening
journey home appears to me to be suitable for it. A reflective mood naturally
follows the exertion of having earned the day’s living. Of course if, instead
of attending to an elementary and profoundly important duty, you prefer to read
the paper (which you might just as well read while waiting for your dinner) I
have nothing to say. But attend to it at some time of the day you must. I now
come to the evening hours.
IX
INTEREST IN THE ARTS
INTEREST IN THE ARTS
Many
people pursue a regular and uninterrupted course of idleness in the evenings
because they think that there is no alternative to idleness but the study of
literature; and they do not happen to have a taste for literature. This is a
great mistake.
Of
course it is impossible, or at any rate very difficult, properly to study
anything whatever without the aid of printed books. But if you desire to
understand the deeper depths of bridge or of boat-sailing you would not be
deterred by your lack of interest in literature from reading the best books on
bridge or boat-sailing. We must, therefore, distinguish between literature, and
books treating of subjects not literary. I shall come to literature in due
course.
Let
me now remark to those who have never read Meredith, and who are capable of
being unmoved by a discussion as to whether Mr. Stephen Phillips is or is not a
true poet, that they are perfectly within their rights. It is not a crime not
to love literature. It is not a sign of imbecility. The mandarins of literature
will order out to instant execution the unfortunate individual who does not
comprehend, say, the influence of Wordsworth on Tennyson. But that is only
their impudence. Where would they be, I wonder, if requested to explain the influences
that went to make Tschaikowsky’s “Pathetic Symphony”?
There
are enormous fields of knowledge quite outside literature which will yield
magnificent results to cultivators. For example (since I have just mentioned
the most popular piece of high-class music in England to-day), I am reminded
that the Promenade Concerts begin in August. You go to them. You smoke your
cigar or cigarette (and I regret to say that you strike your matches during the
soft bars of the “Lohengrin” overture), and you enjoy the music. But you say
you cannot play the piano or the fiddle, or even the banjo; that you know
nothing of music.
What
does that matter? That you have a genuine taste for music is proved by the fact
that, in order to fill his hall with you and your peers, the conductor is
obliged to provide programmes from which bad music is almost entirely excluded
(a change from the old Covent Garden days!).
Now
surely your inability to perform “The Maiden’s Prayer” on a piano need not
prevent you from making yourself familiar with the construction of the
orchestra to which you listen a couple of nights a week during a couple of
months! As things are, you probably think of the orchestra as a heterogeneous
mass of instruments producing a confused agreeable mass of sound. You do not
listen for details because you have never trained your ears to listen to
details.
If
you were asked to name the instruments which play the great theme at the
beginning of the C minor symphony you could not name them for your life’s sake.
Yet you admire the C minor symphony. It has thrilled you. It will thrill you
again. You have even talked about it, in an expansive mood, to that lady—you
know whom I mean. And all you can positively state about the C minor symphony
is that Beethoven composed it and that it is a “jolly fine thing.”
Now,
if you have read, say, Mr. Krehbiel’s “How to Listen to Music” (which can be
got at any bookseller’s for less than the price of a stall at the Alhambra, and
which contains photographs of all the orchestral instruments and plans of the
arrangement of orchestras) you would next go to a promenade concert with an
astonishing intensification of interest in it. Instead of a confused mass, the
orchestra would appear to you as what it is—a marvellously balanced organism
whose various groups of members each have a different and an indispensable
function. You would spy out the instruments, and listen for their respective
sounds. You would know the gulf that separates a French horn from an English
horn, and you would perceive why a player of the hautboy gets higher wages than
a fiddler, though the fiddle is the more difficult instrument. You would live
at a promenade concert, whereas previously you had merely existed there in a
state of beatific coma, like a baby gazing at a bright object.
The
foundations of a genuine, systematic knowledge of music might be laid. You
might specialise your inquiries either on a particular form of music (such as
the symphony), or on the works of a particular composer. At the end of a year
of forty-eight weeks of three brief evenings each, combined with a study of
programmes and attendances at concerts chosen out of your increasing knowledge,
you would really know something about music, even though you were as far off as
ever from jangling “The Maiden’s Prayer” on the piano.
“But
I hate music!” you say. My dear sir, I respect you.
What
applies to music applies to the other arts. I might mention Mr. Clermont Witt’s
“How to Look at Pictures,” or Mr. Russell Sturgis’s “How to Judge
Architecture,” as beginnings (merely beginnings) of systematic vitalising
knowledge in other arts, the materials for whose study abound in London.
“I
hate all the arts!” you say. My dear sir, I respect you more and more.
I
will deal with your case next, before coming to literature.
X
NOTHING IN LIFE IS HUMDRUM
NOTHING IN LIFE IS HUMDRUM
Art
is a great thing. But it is not the greatest. The most important of all
perceptions is the continual perception of cause and effect—in other words, the
perception of the continuous development of the universe—in still other words,
the perception of the course of evolution. When one has thoroughly got imbued
into one’s head the leading truth that nothing happens without a cause, one
grows not only large-minded, but large-hearted.
It
is hard to have one’s watch stolen, but one reflects that the thief of the
watch became a thief from causes of heredity and environment which are as
interesting as they are scientifically comprehensible; and one buys another
watch, if not with joy, at any rate with a philosophy that makes bitterness
impossible. One loses, in the study of cause and effect, that absurd air which
so many people have of being always shocked and pained by the curiousness of
life. Such people live amid human nature as if human nature were a foreign
country full of awful foreign customs. But, having reached maturity, one ought
surely to be ashamed of being a stranger in a strange land!
The
study of cause and effect, while it lessens the painfulness of life, adds to
life’s picturesqueness. The man to whom evolution is but a name looks at the
sea as a grandiose, monotonous spectacle, which he can witness in August for
three shillings third-class return. The man who is imbued with the idea of
development, of continuous cause and effect, perceives in the sea an element
which in the day-before-yesterday of geology was vapour, which yesterday was
boiling, and which to-morrow will inevitably be ice.
He
perceives that a liquid is merely something on its way to be solid, and he is
penetrated by a sense of the tremendous, changeful picturesqueness of life.
Nothing will afford a more durable satisfaction than the constantly cultivated
appreciation of this. It is the end of all science.
Cause
and effect are to be found everywhere. Rents went up in Shepherd’s Bush. It was
painful and shocking that rents should go up in Shepherd’s Bush. But to a
certain point we are all scientific students of cause and effect, and there was
not a clerk lunching at a Lyons Restaurant who did not scientifically put two
and two together and see in the (once) Two-penny Tube the cause of an excessive
demand for wigwams in Shepherd’s Bush, and in the excessive demand for wigwams
the cause of the increase in the price of wigwams.
“Simple!”
you say, disdainfully. Everything—the whole complex movement of the universe—is
as simple as that—when you can sufficiently put two and two together. And, my
dear sir, perhaps you happen to be an estate agent’s clerk, and you hate the
arts, and you want to foster your immortal soul, and you can’t be interested in
your business because it’s so humdrum.
Nothing
is humdrum.
The
tremendous, changeful picturesqueness of life is marvellously shown in an
estate agent’s office. What! There was a block of traffic in Oxford Street; to
avoid the block people actually began to travel under the cellars and drains,
and the result was a rise of rents in Shepherd’s Bush! And you say that isn’t
picturesque! Suppose you were to study, in this spirit, the property question
in London for an hour and a half every other evening. Would it not give zest to
your business, and transform your whole life?
You
would arrive at more difficult problems. And you would be able to tell us why,
as the natural result of cause and effect, the longest straight street in
London is about a yard and a half in length, while the longest absolutely
straight street in Paris extends for miles. I think you will admit that in an
estate agent’s clerk I have not chosen an example that specially favours my
theories.
You
are a bank clerk, and you have not read that breathless romance (disguised as a
scientific study), Walter Bagehot’s “Lombard Street”? Ah, my dear sir, if you
had begun with that, and followed it up for ninety minutes every other evening,
how enthralling your business would be to you, and how much more clearly you
would understand human nature.
You
are “penned in town,” but you love excursions to the country and the
observation of wild life—certainly a heart-enlarging diversion. Why don’t you
walk out of your house door, in your slippers, to the nearest gas lamp of a
night with a butterfly net, and observe the wild life of common and rare moths
that is beating about it, and co-ordinate the knowledge thus obtained and build
a superstructure on it, and at last get to know something about something?
You
need not be devoted to the arts, not to literature, in order to live fully.
The
whole field of daily habit and scene is waiting to satisfy that curiosity which
means life, and the satisfaction of which means an understanding heart.
I
promised to deal with your case, O man who hates art and literature, and I have
dealt with it. I now come to the case of the person, happily very common, who
does “like reading.”
XI
SERIOUS READING
SERIOUS READING
Novels
are excluded from “serious reading,” so that the man who, bent on
self-improvement, has been deciding to devote ninety minutes three times a week
to a complete study of the works of Charles Dickens will be well advised to
alter his plans. The reason is not that novels are not serious—some of the
great literature of the world is in the form of prose fiction—the reason is
that bad novels ought not to be read, and that good novels never demand any
appreciable mental application on the part of the reader. It is only the bad
parts of Meredith’s novels that are difficult. A good novel rushes you forward
like a skiff down a stream, and you arrive at the end, perhaps breathless, but
unexhausted. The best novels involve the least strain. Now in the cultivation
of the mind one of the most important factors is precisely the feeling of
strain, of difficulty, of a task which one part of you is anxious to achieve
and another part of you is anxious to shirk; and that feeling cannot be got in
facing a novel. You do not set your teeth in order to read “Anna Karenina.”
Therefore, though you should read novels, you should not read them in those
ninety minutes.
Imaginative
poetry produces a far greater mental strain than novels. It produces probably
the severest strain of any form of literature. It is the highest form of
literature. It yields the highest form of pleasure, and teaches the highest
form of wisdom. In a word, there is nothing to compare with it. I say this with
sad consciousness of the fact that the majority of people do not read poetry.
I
am persuaded that many excellent persons, if they were confronted with the
alternatives of reading “Paradise Lost” and going round Trafalgar Square at
noonday on their knees in sack-cloth, would choose the ordeal of public
ridicule. Still, I will never cease advising my friends and enemies to read
poetry before anything.
If
poetry is what is called “a sealed book” to you, begin by reading Hazlitt’s
famous essay on the nature of “poetry in general.” It is the best thing of its
kind in English, and no one who has read it can possibly be under the
misapprehension that poetry is a mediaeval torture, or a mad elephant, or a gun
that will go off by itself and kill at forty paces. Indeed, it is difficult to
imagine the mental state of the man who, after reading Hazlitt’s essay, is not
urgently desirous of reading some poetry before his next meal. If the essay so
inspires you I would suggest that you make a commencement with purely narrative
poetry.
There
is an infinitely finer English novel, written by a woman, than anything by
George Eliot or the Brontes, or even Jane Austen, which perhaps you have not
read. Its title is “Aurora Leigh,” and its author E.B. Browning. It happens to
be written in verse, and to contain a considerable amount of genuinely fine
poetry. Decide to read that book through, even if you die for it. Forget that
it is fine poetry. Read it simply for the story and the social ideas. And when
you have done, ask yourself honestly whether you still dislike poetry. I have
known more than one person to whom “Aurora Leigh” has been the means of proving
that in assuming they hated poetry they were entirely mistaken.
Of
course, if, after Hazlitt, and such an experiment made in the light of Hazlitt,
you are finally assured that there is something in you which is antagonistic to
poetry, you must be content with history or philosophy. I shall regret it, yet
not inconsolably. “The Decline and Fall” is not to be named in the same day
with “Paradise Lost,” but it is a vastly pretty thing; and Herbert Spencer’s
“First Principles” simply laughs at the claims of poetry and refuses to be accepted
as aught but the most majestic product of any human mind. I do not suggest that
either of these works is suitable for a tyro in mental strains. But I see no
reason why any man of average intelligence should not, after a year of
continuous reading, be fit to assault the supreme masterpieces of history or
philosophy. The great convenience of masterpieces is that they are so
astonishingly lucid.
I
suggest no particular work as a start. The attempt would be futile in the space
of my command. But I have two general suggestions of a certain importance. The
first is to define the direction and scope of your efforts. Choose a limited
period, or a limited subject, or a single author. Say to yourself: “I will know
something about the French Revolution, or the rise of railways, or the works of
John Keats.” And during a given period, to be settled beforehand, confine
yourself to your choice. There is much pleasure to be derived from being a
specialist.
The
second suggestion is to think as well as to read. I know people who read and
read, and for all the good it does them they might just as well cut
bread-and-butter. They take to reading as better men take to drink. They fly
through the shires of literature on a motor-car, their sole object being
motion. They will tell you how many books they have read in a year.
Unless
you give at least forty-five minutes to careful, fatiguing reflection (it is an
awful bore at first) upon what you are reading, your ninety minutes of a night
are chiefly wasted. This means that your pace will be slow.
Never
mind.
Forget
the goal; think only of the surrounding country; and after a period, perhaps
when you least expect it, you will suddenly find yourself in a lovely town on a
hill.
XII
DANGERS TO AVOID
DANGERS TO AVOID
I
cannot terminate these hints, often, I fear, too didactic and abrupt, upon the
full use of one’s time to the great end of living (as distinguished from
vegetating) without briefly referring to certain dangers which lie in wait for
the sincere aspirant towards life. The first is the terrible danger of becoming
that most odious and least supportable of persons—a prig. Now a prig is a pert
fellow who gives himself airs of superior wisdom. A prig is a pompous fool who
has gone out for a ceremonial walk, and without knowing it has lost an important
part of his attire, namely, his sense of humour. A prig is a tedious individual
who, having made a discovery, is so impressed by his discovery that he is
capable of being gravely displeased because the entire world is not also
impressed by it. Unconsciously to become a prig is an easy and a fatal thing.
Hence,
when one sets forth on the enterprise of using all one’s time, it is just as
well to remember that one’s own time, and not other people’s time, is the
material with which one has to deal; that the earth rolled on pretty
comfortably before one began to balance a budget of the hours, and that it will
continue to roll on pretty comfortably whether or not one succeeds in one’s new
role of chancellor of the exchequer of time. It is as well not to chatter too
much about what one is doing, and not to betray a too-pained sadness at the
spectacle of a whole world deliberately wasting so many hours out of every day,
and therefore never really living. It will be found, ultimately, that in taking
care of one’s self one has quite all one can do.
Another
danger is the danger of being tied to a programme like a slave to a chariot.
One’s programme must not be allowed to run away with one. It must be respected,
but it must not be worshipped as a fetish. A programme of daily employ is not a
religion.
This
seems obvious. Yet I know men whose lives are a burden to themselves and a
distressing burden to their relatives and friends simply because they have
failed to appreciate the obvious. “Oh, no,” I have heard the martyred wife
exclaim, “Arthur always takes the dog out for exercise at eight o’clock and he
always begins to read at a quarter to nine. So it’s quite out of the question
that we should…” etc., etc. And the note of absolute finality in that plaintive
voice reveals the unsuspected and ridiculous tragedy of a career.
On
the other hand, a programme is a programme. And unless it is treated with
deference it ceases to be anything but a poor joke. To treat one’s programme
with exactly the right amount of deference, to live with not too much and not
too little elasticity, is scarcely the simple affair it may appear to the
inexperienced.
And
still another danger is the danger of developing a policy of rush, of being
gradually more and more obsessed by what one has to do next. In this way one
may come to exist as in a prison, and one’s life may cease to be one’s own. One
may take the dog out for a walk at eight o’clock, and meditate the whole time
on the fact that one must begin to read at a quarter to nine, and that one must
not be late.
And
the occasional deliberate breaking of one’s programme will not help to mend
matters. The evil springs not from persisting without elasticity in what one
has attempted, but from originally attempting too much, from filling one’s
programme till it runs over. The only cure is to reconstitute the programme,
and to attempt less.
But
the appetite for knowledge grows by what it feeds on, and there are men who
come to like a constant breathless hurry of endeavour. Of them it may be said
that a constant breathless hurry is better than an eternal doze.
In
any case, if the programme exhibits a tendency to be oppressive, and yet one
wishes not to modify it, an excellent palliative is to pass with exaggerated
deliberation from one portion of it to another; for example, to spend five
minutes in perfect mental quiescence between chaining up the St. Bernard and
opening the book; in other words, to waste five minutes with the entire
consciousness of wasting them.
The
last, and chiefest danger which I would indicate, is one to which I have
already referred—the risk of a failure at the commencement of the enterprise.
I
must insist on it.
A
failure at the commencement may easily kill outright the newborn impulse
towards a complete vitality, and therefore every precaution should be observed
to avoid it. The impulse must not be over-taxed. Let the pace of the first lap
be even absurdly slow, but let it be as regular as possible.
And,
having once decided to achieve a certain task, achieve it at all costs of tedium
and distaste. The gain in self-confidence of having accomplished a tiresome labor
is immense.
Finally,
in choosing the first occupations of those evening hours don't be guided by
anything whatever but your taste and natural inclination.
It
is a fine thing to be a walking encyclopedia of philosophy, but if you happen
to have no liking for philosophy, and to have a like for the natural history of
street-cries, much better leave philosophy alone, and take to street-cries.
Excellent blog. We can always make good use of our time. Since we can't add hours to our day, we must make the best use of the 24 hours we do have. The University of Illinois publishes a newsletter titled "Working Families." It is never longer than four pages, and each article is one or two paragraphs only. It's meant to be kept in the car or handbag, ready to read when one is stopped at a red light, or waiting to pick up a child from school, waiting at a doctor's office, etc. The reader can gain new knowledge while doing other, necessary tasks. I have a friend who always wakes up one hour earlier than she has to - it gives her the "gift of time" and she can concentrate on herself before the family wakes up and needs clean clothes, breakfast, rides to school, papers signed, and before she, herself, needs to get to her job. Sure, she maybe could use that extra hour of sleep, but the calmness and peace she gets from her alone time is precious to her. One of my favorite quotes is "It is okay to be selfish." I think we can apply this to our daily lives and look for those extra moments where we can take time for ourselves to renew, meditate and commune. Making good use of our time is like finding those extra hours we all need.
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