"The point and the justification of leisure are not that the functionary should function faultlessly and without a breakdown, but that the functionary should continue to be a man - and that means that he should not be wholly absorbed in the clear-cut milieu of his strictly limited function; the point is also that he should retain the faculty of grasping the world as a whole and realizing his full potentialities as an entity meant to reach Wholeness.
Because Wholeness is what man strives for, the power to achieve leisure is one of the fundamental powers of the human soul. Like the gift for contemplative absorption in the things that are, and like the capacity of the spirit to soar in festive celebration, the power to know leisure is the power to overstep the boundaries of the workaday world and reach out to superhuman, life-giving existential forces that refresh and renew us before we turn back to our daily work. Only in genuine leisure does a 'gate to freedom' open. Through that gate man may escape from the 'restricted area' of that 'latent anxiety' which a keen observer has perceived to be the mark of the world of work, where 'work and unemployment' are the two inescapable poles of existence.'"
from Josef Pieper's "Leisure the Basis of Culture" (recommended by Leila)
Oh thank you, thank you for justification for leisure! I think we spend way too much trying to stay busy and miss the best...
ReplyDeleteBlessings, Debbie