Embrace Boredom: How Doing Nothing Boosts Productivity


Every time I get into the shower, ideas start flooding in.
Not because I'm trying.
But because I’m not trying.
No screen. No urgency. Just steam and silence.
And then — boom — a line for a blog, a new project idea, a realization about something I read last week... It all starts flowing.
That’s the power of boredom.
That’s the power of slowing down.
“I Don’t Know Where That Came From…”
Ever finish a long drive, and you suddenly have the perfect solution to a problem you’ve been stuck on for weeks?
That’s because boredom creates space.
Not just physical space — but cognitive space.
I’ve had some of my best ideas not in front of my laptop, but:
In the shower
Staring blankly after reading a dense article
Midway through a long, silent drive through the hills
Waiting in line at a grocery store with no phone in hand
The irony?
“When you stop feeding your mind junk, it starts cooking its own food.”
— Me, after deleting half my content subscriptions
The Einstein Model of Daydreaming
Albert Einstein — the legend of logic — solved some of the universe’s deepest mysteries not through non-stop calculation, but through thought experiments in a dream-like state.
He famously imagined riding a beam of light.
He wasn’t doing.
He was wondering.
“Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited, whereas imagination embraces the entire world.”
— Albert Einstein
Einstein’s Theory of Relativity was born in his mind — not in a lab.
He spent hours staring out windows, walking in silence, letting ideas breathe.
The Modern Misuse Of Focus
We equate productivity with motion.
But motion without margin is a recipe for mediocrity.
You need blank space to think beyond the obvious.
You need boredom to build brilliance.
“You should sit in meditation for 20 minutes a day. Unless you're too busy. Then you should sit for an hour.”
— Old Zen saying
How To Schedule “Boring Time” (That Isn’t Actually Boring)
Make it a ritual:
30 minutes a day with no stimulation.
Walk without music.
Stare out the window after reading something deep.
Journal without a prompt.
Do the dishes slowly. Let thoughts float in.
You’ll start noticing:
New connections between old ideas.
Subconscious reflections rising to the surface.
Fresh angles on stale problems.
This isn’t laziness.
This is mental alchemy.
How AI Multiplies The Magic
Boredom is where ideas are born.
AI is how you bring them to life.
Here’s how I use AI after my boredom time:
Recall & Reflect
Feed AI a scattered thought and ask it to connect the dots.
“I was thinking about this book and that documentary. Is there a link?”
Boom — insight.
Idea-to-Content Pipeline
- That random thought in the shower?
→ Dictate it into Notion. Let ChatGPT turn it into a tweet, blog, or YouTube script.
Rapid Experiments
- Have an idea for a product, challenge, or landing page?
→ Build version 1 with AI in under an hour.
Dialog with Self
- Use AI as your brainstorming partner.
“Act like a curious philosopher. Challenge this idea.”
Final Thought: Silence Isn’t Emptiness — It’s Preparation
You’re not meant to be available 24/7.
You’re meant to pause, wander, reflect, and return.
“Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes... including you.”
— Anne Lamott
The best thinkers in the world knew this.
Einstein wandered.
Steve Jobs walked.
Beethoven stared at trees.
They were productive because they knew when to be still.
So…
Unplug.
Do nothing.
Let your boredom breathe.
And then use AI as the brush to paint what boredom brought you.
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