Noise & Solitude

I started reading Cal Newport’s new book called Digital Minimalism this week . I’m always challenged by Cal to seriously consider how I am using my time and my own relationship with technology. His previous book, Deep Work, emphasized how vital it is in the 21st century to have sustained periods of focused (not fragmented) attention to produce valuable work. Cal writes,

“We cannot allocate our attention to multiple things at once and expect it to function at the same level as it would were we to focus on just one activity.  Two tasks cannot possibly be in the attentional foreground at the same time.  One will inevitably end up being the focus, and the other - or others - more akin to irrelevant noise, something to be filtered out.  Or worse still, none will have the focus and all will be, albeit slightly clearer, noise, but degrees of noise all the same.”   (source)

I’m mindful of this undercurrent of digital noise in my own life. I think about the long term result of an attention span that is always fragmented, and distracted by a continual onslaught of digital noise …my e-mail that pops up every 10 minutes, text messages etc…I frequently work with more than 10 tabs open on my computer at once, usually several windows open. I definitely have fragmented attention.

Austin Kleon quotes Edward Tufte. this week stating, “Do not start your day with addictive time vampires such as The New York Times, email, Twitter….All scatter eye and mind, produce diverting vague anxiety, clutter short term memory.”

Digital noise is exactly that. It is NOISE. It clutters our minds and scatters our thoughts.

Pamela Paul’s New York Times article, Let Children Get Bored Again, shares an interview of Lin-Manuel Miranda where he credits “his unattended afternoons with fostering inspiration.”…Because there is nothing better to spur creativity than a blank page or an empty bedroom,” he said. ..”

In all of this I hear the need for silence, for quiet space..for solitude. The digital clutter that invades our minds, captures and fragments our attention, destroys our moments of solitude, and sends our thoughts and emotions fluttering…it is SILENCE that I need and that I want for myself and for my children. Protecting my time and not letting the digital wave clutter my thoughts, emotions and steal my focus.

I’m reminded of a very poignant section from CS Lewis’ book, Mere Christianity where he talks about this initial rising in the morning and our thoughts, concerns and worries coming at us like wild animals. He writes:

The real problem of the Christian life comes where people do not usually look for it. It comes the very moment you wake up each morning. All your wishes and hopes for the day rush at you like wild animals. and the first job each morning consists simply in shovelling them all back; in listening to that other voice, taking that other point of view, letting that other larger, stronger, quieter life come flowing in. and so on, all day. Standing back from all your natural fussings and frettings; coming in out of the wind. (source)

From solitude and quietness, we are able to focus, giving time and attention to valuable tasks. From boredom new ideas have room to form, observation and focus makes way for inspiration and creativity. I am always challenged to take control of my time, to seek wisdom. Psalm 90:12, “So teach us to number our days that we may get a heart of wisdom.”

4 Noteworthy articles I read in 2018

LETTER BY MR. SCHINDELER ABOUT VAN GOGH

The stubbornness with which press and public cling to the myth that van Gogh was, at least by implication, a chronic lunatic, is both amazing and disheartening to those who love accuracy and know something of the artists struggling, toilsome and, in many aspects, inspiring life.

While looking at Van Gogh documents I found this beautiful “letter to the editor” from 1935 in the MOMA archives . At the time a newspaper had printed a caption under a portrait of Van Gogh stating: “Self Portrait of Mad Dutch Painter”. Mr. Edward Schindler felt that this caption was not only inaccurate, but also an unjust portrayal of the painter. He sent in this letter in response to the caption. It is so heartfelt and beautifully written. Mr. Schindeler writes…

At the "time of the opening of the first representative van Gogh exhibition in the United States, it might not be amies to direct attention to the prevalent misconception concerning this painter; a misconception which was epitomized in the line accompanying the photo of a self-portrait in recent editions of several newspapers: Self portrait of Mad Dutch Painter.

In an age where word are often quickly written and quickly published, this letter showed so much thought, consideration and was just so heartfelt. It’s definitely worth reading.

The PDF press releases are some of my favorite documents in the archive. Here is another favorite, a press release from 1935 “MORE THAN 100,000 PEOPLE SEE VAN GOGH EXHIBIT”. So many good things to share from the archives, too many. I could make all the articles from the archives, but this letter to the editor is a favorite.

Would You Hire Your Own Kids? 7 Skills Schools Should Be Teaching Them

"The ability to ask the right questions is the single most important skill." -President, BOC Edwards

On creativity and imagination he notes, “Clay Parker stressed the importance of employees whom he hires being more than just smart. "I want people who can think -- they're not just bright -- they're also inquisitive. Are they engaged, are they interested in the world?" And Mark Summers told me: "People who've learned to ask great questions and have learned to be inquisitive are the ones who move the fastest in our environment because they solve the biggest problems in ways that have most impact on innovation."

Presence, Not Praise: How To Cultivate a Healthy Relationship with Achievement

Maria writes, “Presence, he argues, helps build the child’s confidence by way of indicating he is worthy of the observer’s thoughts and attention — its absence, on the other hand, divorces in the child the journey from the destination by instilling a sense that the activity itself is worthless unless it’s a means to obtaining praise. Grosz reminds us how this plays out for all of us, and why it matters throughout life:

Being present, whether with children, with friends, or even with oneself, is always hard work. But isn’t this attentiveness — the feeling that someone is trying to think about us — something we want more than praise?”

The Distracted Life Can Cost You Everything

The Christian life is an attentive life (Mark 13:37Luke 21:36Ephesians 6:181 Thessalonians 5:61 Peter 5:8). The Christian life is a hearing life(Mark 4:24Luke 8:21John 10:27Romans 10:17Hebrews 3:7–8). But attentive listening to Jesus does not come naturally. It must be cultivated and diligently guarded. And there is no formula for how to pay closer attention. It is cultivated by making attentiveness habitual — by practicing the habits of grace. We learn to pay attention by intentionally trying to pay attention. The Spirit will help us if we ask the Father to teach us (Luke 11:9–10Psalm 25:4).

So whatever it takes, we must pay attention to what we hear. For Jesus’s ways and words are often counterintuitive, and we live in a destructively distracting age. And everything hangs on how well we hear Jesus.