November 1952 Vol. 33, No. 11
A Business Man's
Leisure
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Good health is a human being's precious
possession. A man may have fame, wealth, and talents and a
high executive position - but unless he also has a healthy
body these are practically worthless to him.
The great majority of us can enjoy good health if we will
cooperate with nature. All that is required is a reasonable
degree of care and intelligence in the treatment of our bodies.
Our spare time is an excellent occasion for this sort of recreation.
Our physical and mental systems must pay some tax for the
privilege of living in these exciting times. All too frequently
we do the same about this tax as about taxes on our incomes;
we merely grouch about it. It does not do to think lightly
of the penalties attached to weakness of body.
Business people burdened with responsibilities, harassed
by petty annoyances, and driven to distraction by confused
politics, philosophies and ideas, are perhaps particularly
vulnerable. Except for their physicians, few people who are
not in business realize how great are its demands upon a man's
physique. The higher his position, the more responsibility
he assumes, the greater the stress and the more restricted
the opportunities are to care for health.
Successful business and professional people usually hit
their stride as they pass 40. They advance rapidly when they
reach 45, and continue on at the same or at an accelerated
pace until they knock themselves out. Rarely is a newspaper
issued that does not contain the record of the unexpected
death of some business man in his prime.
Too Much Effort?
Let's not waste time in repining this state of affairs or
in seeking for the match that started the fire, but get busy
putting the fire out.
One of the reasons behind the illness that afflicts people
is their injudicious desire to get places, to do things, to
be seeking success exclusively. They press on strenuously
without diversion or rest. They subscribe to the outmoded
idea society had of disapproving of play for adults. It was
too frivolous. It wasted time. It was all sorts of things
that were not good.
People who have given thought to the matter will not hesitate
to say that leisure time may be the most important factor
in keeping a person mentally and physically healthy. These
are the hours for refreshing your life with thoughts and actions
that are foreign to those that fill your workday. A lawyer
who rigged up a carpenter's shop in his basement had the right
idea. "When I'm working in my shop," he said, "I lose all
thought of worry and responsibility, and my mind clears up
like the air after a storm. I know it sounds silly, but when
I finish something particularly fine, I feel as Leonardo da
Vinci must have felt when he looked at his completed Mona
Lisa."
Wellrounded leisure is part of a superior pattern
of living. It provides opportunity for selfexpression.
It gives a man space for satisfaction in what he does, whether
it be the building of a Gothic cathedral or the fixing of
a kitchen chair. The importance of leisure time use lies in
what you put into the work yourself, and not what the world
thinks of the result.
Proper use of leisure time will meet some psychic needs.
Often people have feelings of inadequacy or insecurity which
they can remove or reduce by the way they invest their spare
time.
Warning Signs
The human body needs regular rest periods and plenty of
sleep in order to throw off accumulated poisons and allow
the organs to recover from fatigue. The mind needs an airing
and an opportunity to harbour new thoughts and ideas. The
spirit needs uplifting through contemplation. All of these
are leisure time activities.
There is never a "right" time to take a rest. We make all
sorts of excuses for staying on the job. When things are going
badly, we say we cannot stop; when they are going well, we
reason that we must take advantage of the trend. The plain
fact is, recognized since time immemorial but increasingly
disregarded, that every person should play truant from work
and affairs at least one day a week.
As to signs, strangely enough many of them are not physical
pains, and this is a pity because we are more inclined to
pay attention to a pain in some muscle than to the more subtle
evidences of tiredness. One of the early signals that we need
a rest is when we become irritable and badmannered.
When little things which would in the course of our healthy
life be brushed off as we would brush off a fly become magnified
into irritations which condition us to snap at our family
and at our business associates, that is a signal that we need
a change.
Medical men of the highest grade have been insistent of
late years on the need for watchfulness to catch the early
signs of fatigue. If you have tired spells, they say, if you
feel you cannot keep up the pace with others, if you have
aches and pains, if the last hour of the day finds you sluggish,
if you are fidgety and restless, if your impatience with trifling
mistakes and apparent slights causes your temperature to rise
that is the time to have a medical examination.
You may never have been ill a day in your life; you may
boast of your stamina and be reluctant to admit a possible
decline in your exuberant vitality, but if you heed any one
of these signs with the intelligent interest given your business
affairs you may be heading off serious trouble and preserving
the very thing that alone makes it possible to continue a
satisfactory life.
The Greatest of Follies
It is the greatest of follies to sacrifice abundant health
on whatever altar. A business man who thinks he can neglect
his physical health and yet be as shrewd, as farseeing
and as resolute as ever, is harbouring a serious delusion.
The man who neglects building himself up will be floored by
difficulties with which he could cope easily if he were in
top condition. He will find himself increasingly void of new
ideas. He will have, in the end, neither the imagination to
give birth to plans nor the grit and resolution needed to
carry them out.
If you have been pronounced physically fit, if your physician
can find no physical reason for your feelings of tiredness
or your lack of interest, it is time to explore other avenues.
No one in good health need ever be borne down by feelings
of tiredness.
Perhaps the trouble lies in taking something too seriously.
It can be eliminated by finding out what that something is.
The factor causing physical or mental unease may be any one
of many things: among others, boredom, worry, inferiority
feeling, fear, oversensitivity, emotional upsets, a
sense of having failed a friend or oneself, frustration, or
lack of integration.
Even when one is doing purely physical work, weariness starts
in the mind before it does in the body. That's worth thinking
over. Evidence is found in the fact that when a man is working
at the thing he would like to play at he seldom suffers from
weariness.
No fancy tricks are needed in the way of exercise, except
perhaps to inveigle us into exercising. Nietzsche remarked
in his introduction to his great philosophical work Thus
Spake Zarathustra: "My most creative moments were always
accompanied by unusual muscular activity." Well, an executive
in his office seeking a bright idea or trying to work out
a problem cannot indulge in much muscular activity. He hasn't
the facilities, and anyhow he must keep up his dignity. This
makes leisure time activity important, because it is in his
spare time that he must build up the resources upon which
to draw during working hours.
The purpose of exercise for health is to give all the muscles
of the body a chance to use their strength. In no other way
can the human machine be kept clean and tuned up.
Some Questions
Our feelings enter into the health picture. If we are conscious
of strain we become emotionally upset and start to feel sorry
for ourselves and our bodies react by giving feelings of fatigue.
Some of us can get into this state just by reading about,
or by listening, to the tales of woe so readily tapped in
conversation. Selfpity, or expression of the "blues"
feeling, are unintentional but genuine efforts to gain the
sympathy of ourselves and others.
When feelings of dissatisfaction come over us, and we begin
to question our mental or physical health, then is a good
time to take positive action to bring about a solution of
our difficulties and lighten our load.
A list of questions given by David Seabury in his helpful
book How to Worry Successfully may be effective. Here
they are: "Who is using up my time? Who is confusing my mind?
Who criticizes me? Who upsets my emotions? What activities
are deflecting my attention? What things are bothering me?
What are the things I need and can get but am neglecting?
What are the things I am doing that someone else could do?
What bad habits can I change that interfere with my accomplishment,
such as procrastination or selfindulgence? What factors
that affect my success do I neglect that I could attend to?
What moods do I indulge in that waste my time, strength and
attention?"
Try, urges Seabury, to correct one of these negatives per
week. There can be no doubt but that getting handicapping
factors out into the open in this way would give a person
a good start toward healthy mental and physical living.
How to Handle Worry
We should not neglect giving attention to the human values
in life. It is a sombre occasion when one admits some lack
of understanding, some casualness, which made life less happy
for someone else, but the realization can be made a step toward
more healthy living.
The alternative to a frank and courageous facing of issues
is continuing fear, and needless fear wears out our fibre.
When there is no corn in the mill, the stones grind upon each
other.
We cannot eliminate every one of the things that bear upon
us. Every day brings a new sort of burden. But we can strengthen
ourselves to bear those things which are a necessary part
of our lives, and we can, after facing them, become indifferent
to the things which we cannot change. It is safe to say that
we shall find, in a selfexamination like this, that
many, if not all of our fears, worries and problems can be
thrown into the wastebasket.
Here are four ways in which anxieties may be disposed of:
They become extinct if they actually come to pass; they become
outgrown because we have developed beyond them; they become
obsolete because circumstances have changed; they become irrelevant
because we have achieved a sense of security in which they
are no longer factors.
The answer to our problem is to face it and do something
about it. How different that is from merely worrying. We can
stand almost any amount of exacting work if only we do not
multiply it by worry.
Worry was defined by Dean Inge as "the interest paid on
trouble before it falls due." Its burden is increased when
we spend long hours computing it. A patient in an asylum told
his doctor: "I'm sorry I'll have to leave you now, but I have
to get back to my worrying: I'm away behind in it."
Some people say they worry because they have so many difficulties
to face. But aren't many difficulties magnified because we
hold them so close that they are out of focus? With imagination,
resourcefulness and perseverance, a way can be found around
most difficulties. Business people, of all others, should
have that little extra margin of sense and effort to reduce
difficulties to zero. To survey the field, to plan intelligently,
to prepare completely, and to attempt with courage: these
are prime requirements in business and they are the means
to resolving difficulties.
Needless Hurry
There is no room for needless hurry in this campaign for
better living. Whoever is in a hurry shows that the thing
he is about is too big for him. He will be whirled around
and made dizzy. By rushing at it he makes accomplishment of
his task more difficult and he increases the chance of failure.
When are all these forwardlooking steps to be taken?
Most people have a set number of hours which are given over
to making a livelihood, and in addition there are the hours
used up in routine living. Development of mental and physical
health in these hours is limited, but leisure m the minutes
and hours above the time needed for the day's routine and
required activity - that is the time to idealize, to create
and to build.
Time, so far as the individual is concerned, consists of
twentyfour hours multiplied by 365 days, multiplied
by "X" years. This is our life time.
Here is an interesting little sum to show how much of the
time is our own - free time to do with as we wish. Not everyone
will agree with it, because men and women have many differing
opinions about leisure time. Some, for example, would count
travel time as leisure time, because they use it pleasantly
for reading. Some would not count meals as working time, because
to them eating is a pleasure. Others count their evening romp
with their children as a duty, and not leisure; or assign
the evening devoted to service clubs to the "work" column;
and some who make outoftown trips for their employers
would count all that time (even the movie and ballgame
part of it) as working time. However, the figures do give
a starting point for selfappraisal, and they will likely
show that we have more time than we think available for building
our bodies and minds into the healthy units they could be,
and for expanding our interests.
| Here is the table: |
|
hours |
| There are 365 days in a year |
|
8760 |
| Deduct 8 hours a day for sleep |
2920 |
|
| Deduct 5 days' work a week at 8 hours a
day for 49 weeks (allowing 2 weeks' vacation and seven
other holidays) |
1960 |
|
| Deduct 2 hours a working day for travel |
490 |
|
| Deduct 3 hours a day for meals |
1095 |
|
| Deduct 1 hour a day for dressing and undressing |
365 |
6830 |
| Hours left to do with as we please |
|
1930 |
This is equal to 80 days of 24 hours each - nearly 22 per
cent of the year.
Are we making the best use of this leisure time? It is a
question for individuals to answer. To some people "leisure"
is time when they can't think of anything to do; to others,
their work is such fun that it is leisure.
One approach suggested is that we appraise these 1930 spare
hours at our current rate of earnings. In cash terms, are
we getting healthbuilding value out of every hour of
leisure? The answer will probably be negative, and that is
what this Monthly Letter is about. There is a pattern of use
for leisure time that will return value far beyond dollar
computation. It will help us to become the kind of human being
we want to be.
We all like to spend some time for which we don't have to
account, but to get the most out of life we need to keep these
unaccounted hours at a minimum. Ease and sloth contribute
little. Idleness can be more tiring than work (The Romans
had a proverb: "It is difficult to rest if you are doing nothing").
What Shall We Do?
It is a blunder to suppose that we must turn to activities
far removed from our job; on this error are founded most of
the lowgrade amusements. In contemplating use of the
time we have to spare we might have in mind the motto that
hung in Arthur Brisbane's office: "Five minutes is a long
time." If we find it hard to find time for the things we want
to do, we shall find it easier to make time.
Waste of time is an easy path to follow. It is, in a French
saying: the "Street of Lost Time. Two hours after meandering
your way through a game of cards, riffling through the pages
of a magazine, idly listening to the radio, or indulging in
insignificant chitchat, you suddenly realize that you
might just as well not have been alive during those idle hours.
Your investment of time returned you nothing.
We need an eye for the parings of time. If we wait for long
stretches of leisure in which to begin something that will
build our health, we may never begin. But almost every day
there are quarter hours unaccounted for, unabsorbed by other
things. In these small periods we may build creative activity
in which we may exercise our ingenuity and express our personality.
And having decided to use them in this way, let us guard them
against people who, with the best of intentions and the greatest
entertaining value, would rob us of them.
About Sleep
It goes without saying that sleep is one of the most important
of our nonworking occupations. Some people cause themselves
trouble because they believe that sleep is just a bad habit,
acquired before there were bright lights to make the night
interesting. Others have trouble in getting the sleep they
need to cope with their responsibilities and their desires.
When a person cannot sleep it is a good bet that he has
dragged his cares to bed with him. Fretting is a bad bedfellow,
with his regrets about what has happened, his fears about
what may happen, his solutions for unsolved problems, and
his infinite store of trivialities that seem to spring from
nowhere.
No fragments of the day's work should be taken to bed. There
should be an impenetrable curtain drawn around sleeping hours,
the hours that prepare a person to face tomorrow. It is well,
even, to keep in mind Helena's meditation in Midsummer
Night's Dream: "And sleep, that sometimes shuts up sorrow's
eye, steal me awhile from mine own company."
Instead of thinking of disturbing things, one may conjure
up pictures of the day's triumphs, and truths learned, and
laughs. These, relaxing the mind in keeping with complete
relaxation of the body, will lead gently into refreshing sleep.
But sleep is not enough. Our brains cannot work unless our
nerves relax. The business man who makes the opportunity to
relax several times a day is doing good business for himself
and for his firm. One man who went fishing frequently and
took a vacation every weekend coined a significant phrase
when he said: "My business requires my absence." He took time
enough away from his desk so that he could think clearly when
he was there, and his employees were not harried by his nerves.
If leisure time is not used to tone up a man's system he
will be irritable when he should be pleasant, restless when
he should be in repose, and excitable when he should be calm.
It is pitiful to watch some men when they are waiting for
an answer to their telephone calls. They drum their fingers,
glare around their offices, fidget and fume. They could get
through their business much better, live longer and work more
happily if only they would seize such occasions of delay for
relaxation - for dropping tension and nervous waste and making
an addition of these seconds or minutes to their leisure time.
Making Things Easier
Strange as it may seem, relaxation makes things easier.
It may bring solution of a problem which eludes us when we
are straining for the solution.
"Recreation" is a less inclusive word than "relaxation."
Leisure is free time. It can be spent in sleeping, releasing
tension every once in a while, or just slumping with your
feet up. That is relaxation. Or leisure may be used in a constructive
way, which is recreation.
Recreation requires enthusiasm for some project, usually
one out of which there may be an intellectual increment of
knowledge about the ways of mice or men.
Recreation serves as an outlet for our emotional and creative
desires by leading them into productive, satisfying and socially
acceptable channels.
The person who is trying to make his spare time count toward
his greatest happiness will ask himself sincerely how he may
achieve the right sort of recreation. He will balance the
kinds of his recreation, he will use recreation to increase
strengths he already has and to develop thoughts which cannot
be expressed through his daily work. He will choose a kind
of recreation which he can expand and continue as he grows
older, giving, at every stage of his life, the fullest possible
expression to his inmost desires and hopes.
Recreation must be tailored to fit the individual, but in
his tailoring the individual must follow certain basic principles,
or else his recreation will not fit.
Published by RBC Financial Group. All editions from the RBC
Letter collection are available on our web site at www.rbc.com/responsibility/letter.
Our e-mail address is: rbcletter@rbc.com.
Publié aussi en francais.
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