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When is the last time you sat and did nothing? I don’t mean the type of nothing as in you just played on your phone, read a book or sat listening to music and didn’t really “do” anything. I mean absolutely nothing. When is the last time you sat still with no technology, without talking, listening, watching, or reading something?

The first time in a very long time that I truly did nothing was several years ago when I was bemoaning to a therapist friend of mine how attached I felt to my technology. Soon after, I was attending a wedding in his area and he generously offered to pick me up at the airport and spend a few hours together before and after the wedding working on the issue.

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I was so grateful and eagerly looking forward… until he told me what it would cost. I would have gladly paid a handsome sum of money instead of the price he asked. He said the only way he would do it is if I agreed to his condition: he would pick me up from the airport and I would immediately hand over anything with an on/off button. I would get everything back when he dropped me back at the airport that evening. That meant no phone, text messages, WhatsApp, or internet, not only for the time we would be together, but while I was at the wedding too.

I reluctantly agreed and when I landed, he took my laptop and phone and placed it in the trunk of his car. We drove to his office and the first thing he had me do was sit still in a chair all by myself with nothing to read, listen to or watch. I was to simply sit, clear my mind, be lost in my own thoughts, undistracted by anything else.

In those moments, I felt like most of the men in a 2014 study who, for 15 minutes, were left alone in a lab room with no phones, screens, or writing implements. All they had before them was a button that would produce an electrical shock if pressed. Even though all of the participants had previously stated that they would pay money to avoid being shocked with electricity, 67% of the men and 25% of women chose to inflict electrical shocks on themselves rather than just sit there quietly and think. In other words, a significant number of people would rather suffer physical pain than be left alone with their thoughts.

The first minute or two, I was basically crawling out of my own skin, fidgety, uncomfortable and feeling like a limb had been amputated. But as the minutes went on, I began to lean into the alone time—breathing, thinking, and relishing the opportunity to just be. It felt different, refreshing, and long overdue. Though I have yet to successfully implement everything I learned that day, it opened my eyes to the critical importance of both maintaining the capacity to be alone, and, even more importantly, to dedicate time each day to doing nothing.

Niksen

The Dutch have a term for doing nothing: niksen. Niksen is not the byproduct of passive laziness. It is the conscious decision to do nothing, to sit motionless, to simply be. We are living in a time where busyness and activity are the default. Stopping, disconnecting and just thinking takes intentionality, requires effort, and only happens if we allocate time for it.

Our generation has an aversion to being still. We confuse busyness with productivity and we often use it as a social currency to impress people with how important or significant we are. Truly impressive people, we think, are busy, crazy busy, insanely busy. We mistakenly conclude that to admit we spend time each day intentionally doing nothing would make us look bad, lazy or unambitious.

But it is exactly the opposite. As it turns out, truly impressive people, truly present people, find time to disconnect, to experience aloneness, to quiet the constant noise so that they can truly hear what is going in their head. Truly spiritual people carve space for hisbodedus, contemplative time, and a standing meeting with God, carrying on a conversation like you would with a friend.

Busyness has been scientifically correlated with burnout, anxiety disorders, and stress-related diseases that ravage the body. Finding time to disconnect from technology and to-do lists and instead mindfully breathing deeply for just a few minutes each day has been proven to improve physical and mental health.

3 Minutes a Day

A couple of years ago, I decided to return to the lessons I had learned that fateful day with my friend. I made a commitment to myself and recruited a few others to spend time each day with our phones in airplane mode, a timer set to three minutes, and a conscious effort to breathe deeply and get lost in our own thoughts. I can’t say I do it every single day but doing it with friends and being able to hold one another accountable has been very helpful.

The days that I do my three minutes are categorically different. Afterwards, I feel calmer, more present, more creative and more connected. The few times I have done my three minutes shortly before going into davening have radically changed that rendezvous with my Creator.

There are 1,440 minutes in a day. Even if you sleep for 8 hours a night, that leaves you with 960 minutes each day. It is hard to believe that we can’t find three of them to make contact with our souls, and check in with our Creator, especially when doing so will so radically enrich the rest of our day.

Try it. Find three minutes every day. You can do it alone, or sit down and do it with someone else. You can make a pact with others to hold each other accountable or you can use an app on your phone to form the habit. The details are up to you, but I guarantee you, if you find just three minutes a day to disconnect and reconnect with yourself and God, it will change your other 1,437.

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Rabbi Efrem Goldberg is the Senior Rabbi of the Boca Raton Synagogue (BRS), a rapidly-growing congregation of over 950 families and over 1,000 children in Boca Raton, Florida. BRS is the largest Orthodox Synagogue in the Southeast United States. Rabbi Goldberg’s warm and welcoming personality has helped attract people of diverse backgrounds and ages to feel part of the BRS community, reinforcing the BRS credo of “Valuing Diversity and Celebrating Unity.” For more information, please visit www.brsonline.org.