{"id":4126,"date":"1953-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1953-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1953-vol-34-no-9-a-business-mans-hobbies\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:39:39","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:39:39","slug":"september-1953-vol-34-no-9-a-business-mans-hobbies","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1953-vol-34-no-9-a-business-mans-hobbies\/","title":{"rendered":"September 1953 &#8211; Vol. 34, No. 9 &#8211; A Business Man&#8217;s Hobbies"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The play spirit is an essential ingredient                     of recreation. The more complicated civilization becomes,                     and the more elaborate the machinery of living is made, the                     more necessary it will be to create a temporary retreat from                     the material obligations of everyday life.<\/p>\n<p> The work we do to earn a living is activity toward an end,                     and play is activity as an end. At the same time, play is                     not aimless. Play, fun and laughter are agents of health.                     They give repose to the usually busy brain centres and tone                     up the muscles.<\/p>\n<p>The Greeks were the first people in the world to play, writes                     Edith Hamilton in <em>The Greek Way to Western Civilization<\/em>.                     They played on a great scale. All over Greece there were games,                     all sorts of games. Triumphing generals gave place there to                     an Olympic victor. To rejoice in life, to find the world beautiful                     and delightful to live in, was a mark of the Greek spirit                     which distinguished it from all that had gone before. It was                     the Greek philosopher Aristotle who gave us a near approach                     to a psychoanalytic theory of play. He said that in play the                     emotions become purified of a great deal of the distasteful                     and dangerous properties which adhere to them.<\/p>\n<p>If there were nothing else done by play, one thing justifies                     our indulging in it: play helps us to forget our worries and                     at the same time tones up our minds for a fresh attack on                     the cause of our worries.<\/p>\n<p>Variety in play is better than concentration on one form                     of play. The man whose only sport is golf is not using his                     play instinct to the greatest advantage. Under certain circumstances                     a game of golf may not be just the right prescription to promote                     digestion, soothe the nerves and ward off old age.<\/p>\n<h3>To Have a Hobby<\/h3>\n<p>To have a hobby is to indulge in some form of play which                     exercises our hands as well as our brains, and to take a line                     that cures our despondent, worried, jittery feelings.<\/p>\n<p>The machine age has tended to make our jobs routine. There                     are so many of us doing single parts of big jobs that we are                     inclined to feel individually unimportant and insignificant.                     When we indulge in a hobby through which we see something                     taking complete form under our own hands, then we gain self-confidence                     and self-respect.<\/p>\n<p>Every person should spend five or six hours a week at some                     creative task in which he can submerge himself completely.                     The sense of pressure under one&#8217;s everyday task can be escaped                     by riding a hobby vigorously around the cellar.<\/p>\n<p>The hobby should be something in which a person may excel                     and in which he takes a keen delight. There is relaxation                     and comfort in doing something for the sheer delight of doing                     it. This means, naturally, that one&#8217;s hobby may change form                     many times in a lifetime, but even the changes are good, because                     every one gives us something new to think about, a new approach                     to the world, a new way of seeing things.<\/p>\n<h3>We Need a Rest<\/h3>\n<p>Everyone &#8211; even the fortunate man who finds his job challenging                     and exciting &#8211; needs rest, a change from accustomed tasks.<\/p>\n<p>The rest may be a few minutes stretched-out relaxation,                     or a half hour working at or gloating over the results of                     a hobby, or a walk, or a whirl at some physical training apparatus.                     It may even consist in doing something that the janitor should                     do, something that demands stretching, cramping, stooping                     and hammering that exercises muscles. Hanging a picture on                     the wall, or moving one to a new location, can be restful                     in this sense of the word.<\/p>\n<p>The trick is to cease using tired muscles and to use others                     that are well-rested. If, after an hour of dreary toil                     over the month&#8217;s bills or the sad state of affairs on the                     production line, you take a long walk, you are resting as                     you walk &#8211; resting your eyes and mind while working your legs.<\/p>\n<p>While exercise and changed activity are good as restoratives                     after work, most people wish to do something specific as a                     hobby. They desire a sense of achievement.<\/p>\n<p>Well, the field is wide. One may learn to play. a musical                     instrument (a Toronto business executive started last year                     to take piano lessons); or explore space with a telescope                     or minute life with a microscope (there are astronomy and                     chemistry clubs in many cities and towns); or watch birds,                     or collect insects, or probe rocks, or trace the steps taken                     by explorers and adventurers. Every part of Canada abounds                     in opportunities for indulging hobbies that carry with them                     the reward of health-giving activity and mental stimulation.<\/p>\n<p>Out of achievement in a hobby comes the sense of contribution,                     of accomplishment. There can be, also, a feeling of companionship                     &#8211; with others who are engaging in similar hobbies, and with                     one&#8217;s family, whose members will be inevitably caught up in                     our enthusiasm.<\/p>\n<p>When you have something definite and attractive to look                     forward to, the thought of it will give a glow and a more                     intense vitality to your whole day.<\/p>\n<p>Tests by neurologists show that mental ability increases                     as the ability to use the hands increases. A hobby that uses                     manual dexterity demands clear thinking and the working out                     of solutions to problems, and success in these gives us a                     sense of pride and pleasure.<\/p>\n<h3>But Not Too Much<\/h3>\n<p>A hobby should not become obsessive, either of thought or                     of time. It should be challenging enough to keep one interested,                     but not so difficult that one can&#8217;t achieve something in it;                     it should not demand so much work that it becomes merely another                     job.<\/p>\n<p>Some questions designed to help us select suitable hobbies                     are suggested by Dr. William C. Menninger in his booklet called                     <em>Enjoying Leisure Time<\/em>. If you can answer &#8220;yes&#8221; to                     most of them, says Dr. Menninger, you&#8217;ll know that you are                     on the right track.<\/p>\n<p>Here are the questions: Will this activity give me fun and                     enjoyment? Is it within my capabilities? Can I make the time                     for it? Will it meet my social needs? Can I make the space                     for it? Can I afford it? Can it be continued indefinitely,                     even after my retirement?<\/p>\n<p>It should be such a hobby that, instead of dreading our                     tomorrows we will look forward to them. The choice is as wide                     as life itself.<\/p>\n<p>It is never too late to start, but on the other hand there                     are virtues in starting early. One group of older men wanted                     to get advice about what they should do to occupy their years                     after retirement. The group found, by questioning others who                     had developed active and fascinating hobbies, that they had                     started early in life. It is not wise to arrive at the first                     morning of retirement with the idea of starting something                     then.<\/p>\n<p>As much time as possible should be devoted to cultivating                     enduring interests. It may be necessary to try and then discard                     several hobbies before the right one is found.<\/p>\n<p>Let it be gardening or pottery, collecting or woodcarving,                     photography, radio-building, machinists work, carpentry,                     painting or anything else, something can be found that will                     give a sense of self-completion, of creation and of tranquillity.<\/p>\n<p>Collecting may seem an inane pursuit to many people, but                     with a little ingenuity it can be made fascinating and challenging.                     One stamp collector &#8211; stamp collecting has been called &#8220;King                     of Hobbies&#8221; &#8211; hinges an issue of a country&#8217;s stamps in a frame                     around the page, and then in the middle he writes particulars                     about it: when it was adopted, the artist who designed it,                     why this design was chosen, and any other interesting matter                     he can glean from the encyclopedia, the history of the country,                     and the daily papers.<\/p>\n<p>This is a more thrilling way to go about collecting than                     the mere scraping together of a lot of something. It is a                     plan that can be adapted to building collections of autographs,                     china, guns, coins, buttons, insects or flatirons.<\/p>\n<p>In prospecting for a hobby we should not forget reading,                     or we should leave enough spare time from other things for                     this aid to intellectual growth. We don&#8217;t need to be Quiz                     Kids, but we should have something to challenge our thinking,                     the feature about us which distinguishes us from the lower                     animals. No special scholarship aptitude is necessary. Many                     persons who started after forty to read translations of the                     classics found them just as fascinating as they had found                     thrillers earlier in their lives.<\/p>\n<h3>Creative Interest<\/h3>\n<p>A hobby satisfies the desire in all of us to create something.                     There are a thousand and one ways in which people satisfy                     their creative urge. Take the crafts &#8211; woodworking, weaving,                     leather working, metal working, basketry, clay modelling,                     ceramics; or the arts &#8211; painting, drawing, composing, writing,                     photographing; or gardening, raising pets, looking after an                     aquarium; or making airplanes, boats, doll houses. These are                     just some of the many ways in which you can be a maker, an                     originator.<\/p>\n<p>In choosing a hobby, the really big question is: Will it                     give you fun and enjoyment? It must interest you. It must                     be something you do because you want to do it.<\/p>\n<p>But we must not allow a hobby to become master. We should                     be able to drop it painlessly at any time when more imperative                     demands are made of us. It should be willing to put up with                     our fits-and-starts approach to it. It should not                     become possessive.<\/p>\n<h3>Enjoyment of Life<\/h3>\n<p>Leisure time use, whether in a strenuous exercise or in                     something more sedentary, should be made up of enjoying things                     that are pleasant. Thus doing, we gain control of our thoughts,                     and it is our thinking that makes us what we are &#8211; executive                     enterprisers or worrying workers, pleasant companions or grouches.                     Right thinking tends to give us satisfactory lives and the                     state of mind that brings peace.<\/p>\n<p>This involves a certain amount of self-control, without                     which there never has been, and cannot be, a good life. It                     is necessary to make all our other virtues avail.<\/p>\n<p>Only those who are self-controlled can adapt themselves                     to the perpetual shifting of conditions we know in our day,                     and any hobby that contributes to self-control is well                     worth while. We recall Napoleon, &#8220;The wonderful being who                     could have governed the world, but could not rule his own                     restless mind.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A hobby can add to enjoyment of life by calming irritations                     and enabling the hobbyist to turn his nervous feeling into                     repose. In fact, being calm can be made a hobby in itself.                     Plutarch&#8217;s advice may seem quaint to us, but there is a deal                     of good sense in it: &#8220;We should habituate ourselves, when                     letters are brought to us, not to open them instantly&#8230;not                     to bite the strings in two&#8230;when a messenger comes, not to                     run to meet him&#8230;not to jump up when a friend tells us he                     has something new to tell us.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Seeking Happiness<\/h3>\n<p>True repose does not depend upon external conditions, but                     on sound adjustment to life. It is not to be achieved suddenly,                     by a miracle, but gradually by planning our days so as to                     get a balance of activity and leisure, of doing and of thinking.                     We may not be able to correct the cause of whatever troubles                     us, but we can perhaps offset the thing itself.<\/p>\n<p>Anyhow, our hobby of self-control will enable us to                     keep cool in an emergency until it is very clear just what                     should be done. It will help us to level off our ups-and-downs,                     so that, while not soaring so high in the fever heat of some                     enthusiasm, we have not quite so far to drop when we shut                     off the power.<\/p>\n<p>Out of a balanced life arises the state of mind we call                     happiness. It has the relation to pleasure that Mark Twain                     saw between climate and weather: it is the same thing but                     it lasts longer.<\/p>\n<p>Happiness is not to be waited for, but is something we should                     step out to seek. It does not consist in the night-club                     idea of what is a good time. It does require health, self-expression,                     and a course to steer. These are in some degree inter-dependent                     and reciprocating. If we have physical health we have an interest                     in progressing toward self-expression. If we have an                     urge toward self-expression we have an incentive toward                     health.<\/p>\n<p>Happiness is a positive thing, but there is room for one                     negative: if an unhappiness has failed to befall us, we can                     enjoy that fact as a happiness. As the Irish proverb puts                     it: &#8220;If you can&#8217;t be happy, be aisy. If you can&#8217;t be aisy,                     be as aisy as you can.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>About Friendship<\/h3>\n<p>Essential to pleasureful leisure time and to effective executive                     work is friendship, and friendship can become a hobby. Mature                     men and women have found that friendship, their greatest standby                     in work and in play, is not something won by hard trying.                     Youths imagine that the leading events in their lives will                     make their entrance on the scene to the sound of drums and                     trumpets, but when we look back we find that all the important                     things &#8211; and especially our friendships came in quietly, almost                     unnoticed.<\/p>\n<p>To have a close friend with whom to exchange opinions on                     current affairs or the philosophy of me ages is a priceless                     gift for leisure-time spending. By this sharing, happiness                     is multiplied. It makes life more vivid to have a friend with                     whom one may turn on one&#8217;s brain.<\/p>\n<h3>Well-rounded Living<\/h3>\n<p>The secret of a healthful, well-rounded life, whether                     for business executive or housewife, is to really make the                     best of what one has. This does not mean to be acquiescent                     in one&#8217;s environment, but to make it the best one can.<\/p>\n<p>When you analyse some acquaintance who is always full of                     enthusiasm that you envy, what do you find? That his enthusiasm                     is made up of a number of things: knowledge, absorbing interest,                     optimism, physical well-being, imagination, initiative,                     and a passion for doing things. These are qualities which                     can be cultivated in one&#8217;s leisure time.<\/p>\n<p>Building upon these, the wise man will do what he does in                     his business and family life: he will preserve a proper proportion                     between his thought for the present and his thought for the                     future in order not to spoil the one by paying too great attention                     to the other. Frivolous people live too much in the present;                     worriers live too much in the future.<\/p>\n<p>The well-rounded person knows that, having done his                     best, it is useless to consume energy in fretting. Far better                     use leisure time in relaxing and building up reserves so as                     to take up the battle with renewed vigour when the time comes.<\/p>\n<p>This is far from languid contentment. No businessman is                     ever contented with business as it is&#8221; he wishes to make it                     better. No good housewife is ever so contented with her house-furnishings                     and her cookery that she ceases to seek improvement. Our human                     urge is against becoming indistinguishable molecules or assembly                     line robots.<\/p>\n<h3>Some Suggestions<\/h3>\n<p>The first order of business toward better use of leisure                     time is to <em>do <\/em>something. There is great satisfaction                     to be found in being able to look at and pat with one&#8217;s hand                     something one has created and say: &#8220;That&#8217;s mine. It may not                     seem much to the rest of you, but I think it&#8217;s grand. And                     I did it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There are a thousand-and-one ways in which people                     can create things. W. Van Til remarks in his booklet <em>Time                     on your Hands<\/em>: &#8220;There is no denying that many of us have                     a bad case of the American leisure time disease called spectatoritis.                     We sit on the bleachers; we sit in our armchairs; we sit in                     Row K. seat 12.&#8221; Well, it&#8217;s no more wrong to sit and listen                     or to sit and watch than it is to eat ice cream, says Van                     Til, but don&#8217;t let us sit on our hands all the time. Put them                     to use.<\/p>\n<p>Television, radio, the movies, and sporting events can be                     exciting and fun, but they are at best vicarious pleasures.                     Someone else is doing the fighting, or indulging in romance,                     or doing things successfully. We have no part in what we see                     or hear. Best use of leisure time demands a reasonable assignment                     of time for participation.<\/p>\n<p>The second suggestion for wise use of leisure time is to                     get started at once. It is largely a matter of just going                     ahead: &#8220;You can&#8217;t get a hit with the bat on your shoulder&#8221;                     is a saying from baseball that fits the case. Whatever your                     knack or attribute and however tiny it is, make it grow.<\/p>\n<p>Anyone who doubts that there is a hobby or a leisure time                     activity suited to his capabilities and desires should know                     that there is a book called <em>Care and Feeding of Hobby                     Horses <\/em>by Ernest Elmo Calkins. It contains 218 lists                     of books on hobbies &#8211; not a list of 218 books, but of 218                     <em>lists <\/em>of books.<\/p>\n<p>A third hint is to be careful. Pleasure, even in leisure                     time, should never be purchased at the expense of pain, nor                     even at the risk of incurring it. Some sports should not be                     indulged in without our having a medical checkup; some hobbies                     may be too much for our eyesight. Every man possesses a limit                     beyond which he cannot go. Our satisfaction point, and our                     saturation point, are determined by our own peculiar nature.                     The Golden Mean of the Greeks was simply a way of life which                     avoided excesses.<\/p>\n<h3>Be Reasonable<\/h3>\n<p>The fourth suggestion is to be reasonable about the spending                     of leisure time. When we attempt things beyond our capacity                     we invite sorrow. A good approach to the liberal spread of                     hobby choice is that of Socrates when confronted by hundreds                     of luxurious articles spread for sale in the market place.                     He said &#8220;How much there is in the world that I do not want.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It would not be sensible, for example, for the person who                     has no skill of hand and eye to embark upon a clay modelling                     hobby. It would not gratify the carpenter to do carpentry                     in the evening, using the same skills and muscles as in his                     daily work.<\/p>\n<p>It is well, indeed, to project into a hobby some of one&#8217;s                     work skills and work lore, fitting the hobby to one&#8217;s aptitudes.                     But this is not to be interpreted narrowly. It is no health-giving                     relief for the executive to use his spare time in running                     a business, even if it be in a different line from the one                     which takes up his working day.<\/p>\n<p>He needs to explore some field of recreational activity                     with which he is relatively unfamiliar. He doesn&#8217;t have to                     be a superior athlete to enjoy playing handball, or accomplished                     in any art in order to enjoy it as a hobby. After all, most                     of us are just average; there are only a few champions.<\/p>\n<p>As for taking on executive responsibilities outside his                     job, it might be a good rule for him to refuse obligations                     unless he is sure that they are his. Men and women have been                     known to kill themselves because they added imaginary obligations                     to their true responsibilities. The essayist Addison quotes                     an epitaph from an Italian tombstone: &#8220;I was well, but trying                     to be better, I am here.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Achieving Tranquillity<\/h3>\n<p>A well-balanced hobby life will include spare time                     activity designed to provide physical health, intellectual                     growth, contemplation, social enjoyment, creative effort,                     audience relaxation, and periods of solitude.<\/p>\n<p>It may be well for a suburban dweller to doff his prim business                     suit, to completely relax in an old pair of baggy tweeds,                     and to putter around in the garden. Later in the evening,                     with slippers and pipe, he will settle before the cosy fire                     with a favourite book.<\/p>\n<p>The aim and object of it all is to achieve tranquillity.                     The business man needs space and air in his mind. He wants                     that sort of serenity which seems to be impossible of attainment                     in the hurly-burly of everyday business life. It comes                     in part from active creative hobbies, and in part from quiet,                     solitary intellectual pursuits. Boredom has no place in leisure.<\/p>\n<p>Good leisure use is not like a blazing fire, which might                     burn. It is rather, as so well put by Walter B. Pitkin in                     one of his books, like the dance of firelight upon a wall.                     It doesn&#8217;t scorch; it has a playful touch.<\/p>\n<p>Every man, however dynamic he may be in his bread-earning                     life, may use his spare time to cultivate and to take pleasure                     in a quiet and cheerful temperament, happy in the enjoyment                     of a sound body, a clear intellect, and lively interest in                     things. He needs time by himself in the midst of the whirl,                     for contemplation or for making things. And he is a wise man                     who leaves some of his leisure time unaccounted and unplanned                     for, making no effort except what the caprice of the moment                     dictates.<\/p>\n<p>That day is ill-spent in which a mature person has                     not done something constructive along the lines of his interest,                     or in which he has been too depressed to notice the brightness                     of the sun, the colour of grass and of flowers, the mystery                     of the sea and the lure of moonlight on the water.<\/p>\n<p>There is no ready-made hobby suit into which all people                     will fit. Every person makes his own pattern. By making it                     wisely, he may cure a present ill, fill a great want, or prevent                     physical and mental ailments. And, as is said pungently by                     one of the philosophers: &#8220;It is disgraceful for a person to                     grow old in self-neglect.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[33],"class_list":["post-4126","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-33"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>September 1953 - Vol. 34, No. 9 - A Business Man&#039;s Hobbies - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1953-vol-34-no-9-a-business-mans-hobbies\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"September 1953 - Vol. 34, No. 9 - A Business Man&#039;s Hobbies - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The play spirit is an essential ingredient of recreation. 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The more complicated civilization becomes, and the more elaborate the machinery of living is made, the more necessary it will be to create a temporary retreat from the material obligations of everyday life. 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