Y
May 29th
WORK IS THERAPY
“Work nourishes noble minds.”
—SENECA, MORAL LETTERS, 31.5
ou know that feeling you get when you haven’t been to the gym in a
few days? A bit doughy. Irritable. Claustrophobic. Uncertain. Others
get a similar feeling when they’ve been on vacation for too long or right
after they first retire. The mind and the body are there to be used—they
begin to turn on themselves when not put to some productive end.
It’s sad to think that this kind of frustration is an everyday reality for a
lot of people. They leave so much of their potential unfulfilled because they
have jobs where they don’t really do much or because they have too much
time on their hands. Worse is when we try to push these feelings away by
buying things, going out, fighting, creating drama—indulging in the empty
calories of existence instead of finding the real nourishment.
The solution is simple and, thankfully, always right at hand. Get out
there and work.