Were you constantly bored as a child? Maybe that helped you to develop your
innate1 ability to be creative.
Boredom2 can be a good thing for children, according to Dr Teresa Belton, researcher at the University of East Anglia's School of Education and Lifelong Learning. After interviewing authors, artists and scientists in Britain, she's reached the conclusion that cultural expectations that children should be constantly active could
hamper3 the development of their imagination.
British comedienne and writer Meera Syal grew up in a small mining village with few
distractions4. The researcher said: "Lack of things to do spurred her to talk to people she wouldn't otherwise have engaged with and try activities she wouldn't, under other circumstances, have experienced, such as talking to elderly neighbours and learning to bake cakes."
Belton added: "Boredom made her write. Meera Syal kept a diary from a young age, filling it with observations, short stories, poems, and
diatribe5."
The academic didn't ignore the old saying the devil finds work for idle hands, though. Belton
pointed6 out that young people who don't have the interior resources to deal with boredom creatively may end up smashing up bus shelters or taking cars out for a joyride.
How about watching TV and videos on the computer? The academic believes that nothing replaces
standing7 and staring at things and observing your surroundings.
It's the sort of thing that
stimulates8 the imagination, she said, while the screen "tends to short circuit that process and the development of creative capacity".
Dr Belton concluded: "For the sake of creativity, perhaps we need to slow down and stay offline from time to time."
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