Let me explain the question: I have several hobbies like playing the guitar, sometimes singing, walking and enjoying nature, reading and lately sunbathing while hearing an audio book.
Playing an instrument, singing and reading end up being tiring, even if I enjoy the music and the reading. I feel I have to stop after being concentrated for an hour.
Quieter hobbies, like walking to enjoy nature end up being boring as well. The only completely passive hobby I have is sunbathing and it all depends on how interesting the audio book is.
Sometimes I’d like to practice a hobby, but I’m so tired I end up lazying around, watching a stupid youtube video but thinking I should do something else.
What else could I do? Any other completely passive hobbies?
No drugs, no alcohol.
Gardening and cooking. Plant some veggies or herbs used in your favorite recipes. Start a sourdough starter. Then when they ripen, use them to cook with. Feed that back into planning the garden for next year. Low cost, small chunks of time spread out over months, high personal reward.
i’ve realized in the last few years that i spend my biggest chunk of time out of work – and by far – with the community bottoms in my city, so it’s become a de facto hobby.
i suspect that it’ll never run out until i’m too old or out of shape, given how intrinsically tied to human nature it is.
If your free time is required to be spent optimally then you aren’t experiencing the actual freedom of it. If what you want to do is nothing then do nothing.
Catch up with loved ones. Volunteer with your local mutual aid group. Join a local sports club.
When I’m burnt out from programming, I tend to just play some video games. Depending on how fried my brain is, it might be simple, mindless games like Brotato or Slime Rancher, or maybe something more complex like a survival game.
I do my future self favors!
Oftentimes I may want to listen to a podcast or whatever, but don’t have anything specific to do with my hands. So I tend to tackle tasks that don’t get done daily - cleaning the microwave, folding and putting away the clean laundry, vacuuming, making my bed, weeding the garden, etc.
There’s always something that needs doing around the house. And it’s very calming and enjoyable to be able to come home to everything in it’s place and no weird smells from the kitchen haha
If I am actually bored, I also start cleaning things you don’t usually clean. Footboards, light switches, the fridge… Put away stuff you won’t use in the next month.
But right now I am considering to put cooking from chores to hobby category in my mind. If I try to look at it as fun instead of have to - I think I will do it more. And my sourdough starter is ready to go also.But right now I am considering to put cooking from chores to hobby category in my mind.
That’s a great way to reframe cooking! When I’m feeling bored of it or am dreading cooking, sometimes picking out a new recipe helps me get excited about it again.
One of my favorite YouTuber is back with cooking, that’s what made me try to re-frame it.
Thanks for the link! I’ll def check this out and see if I can pick up some new skills
I like crochet or knitting. When I’m working on something, there’s usually a period where I do have to focus on the task, but once I get going, I love how I can just do it ambiently, as I’m either doing something else, or nothing at all — I used to take crochet to my university lectures, and it actually helped me to focus on the lecture.
Similarly, when I made a chainmaille hauberk, I liked how easily I could just zone out once I had a bag of rings and I just needed to interlock them, using pliers. When I was piecing all of it together, I needed to focus, but I spent tens of hours just mindlessly linking rings together
I like these too. You can knock out a scarf or blanket in a repetitive pattern without thinking about it while watching TV.
Sometimes I just watch movies and short series.
personally like watching ones not made in my country as of late. Its fun to see stuff from other cultures. HBO has a fuck ton of old movies, even back in the 1930’s. Those are fun sometimes too.
I have a lot of hobbies. Sometimes, all I can do is take a break and watch Tv.
Devolve into anxiety
I take naps
Maybe read a book?
I listen to books and work on my car the combo has been working for decades
Panic cry and panic more. Not having a special interest to dive completely into causes a lot of panic and anxiety. Usually because once I’m done with a hyper fixation there isn’t a lot of options because of waves at everything. So just usually panic and cry.
Usually I accept that I’m going to completely veg out sometimes and I’ll watch something. Youtube, streaming, scrolling around social media. Maybe listen straight through a music album that was made for full listen-throughs.
Consumptive hobbies leave you with more to see than you ever could in one lifetime, so there’s always something.
Not every hobby or every moment needs to be productive. Sometimes you need down time, moments to let your mind rest like you let your body rest.




