Boredom: lack or rejection?

One possible polarity is that between lack and rejection.

In the first case – lack — boredom expresses the confused, irritated and
discontented perception, in large part unclear and contradictory, of a lack
of some essential function in human relations (Svendsen 2004). An example
is the boredom of a person involved in a group or institution characterized
by an excess of self-satisfaction, conformism or superficiality, and
consequently boredom experiences result as a sign of the absence of
vivacity and personal richness in the communication between the members of
the institution .

In the other case – rejection – boredom expresses an active impulse of
subtle aggression, which tends to annul the dynamic contribution offered by
reality and in general by others, asserting instead destructive, grandiose
and hostile narcissism . In this case boredom may be the consequence of a
denial of the affectivity of the other, as occurs in certain perversions or
chronic psychoses, in which the need to keep the acute, dramatic aspect of
the psychosis under control drives the psychotic to drastically repress all
dynamic aspects of the relationship for the sake of tranquility and
stability: Order replaces life and all its fluctuations . In both cases –
lack and rejection – the space-time for genuineness is saturated, as well
as a possible contact with otherness, the objects felt are like something
known, they are always the same over the time and they will never change.
In the first example it was “conformism or superficiality”, in the second
“the full repression of all dynamics aspects of relationship”.

To find our way through the labyrinthine accumulation of data, I would like
to propose a specific conceptual core, which, as I said before, in no way
exhausts our subject, nor does it begin to cover all the possible meanings.
Instead, it aims to serve as a point of reference around which other
possible meanings can be arranged, either by analogy or by contrast.



I propose to define boredom as the subjective experience of a partial or
total lack of authenticity in relationships; hence boredom expresses a
confused, unclear emotion that we are not in the presence of something
which comes from within, but of something affected, far removed or
conformist. Objects of perception, experienced as obvious and predictable,
lose their aura of novelty and become enmeshed in a network of
pre-established symbols which conceal their potential for change, vitality
and discovery. The object is perceived with anger since it is experienced
as lack lustre, dull, and all too familiar.

Within the vast world of boredom, I have tried to identify a specific way
of being bored, which is typical of people who are partially or completely
trapped in a contradictory relationship with another person or with a group
or institution in which the appreciation of some parts corresponds to the
non-acknowledgment – through denial or confusion – of other dead or
deadened parts of the other person, group or institution. The result is a
veil of hypocrisy that in a sense shrouds the relationships with dust and
envelops them in an aura of boredom. This boredom arises when the hunger
for authenticity so characteristic of human beings remains unsatisfied.
This phenomenon cannot be explained exclusively by idealization but is
related instead to a primary, essential acknowledgment of the irreducible
core of otherness, which is the underpinning of both our pains and our
pleasures. As Greenson pointed out years ago, emptiness is an overload of
dead or deadened objects whose presence inhibits the affective and
libidinal drive towards the outer world: “The emptiness in boredom is due
to the repression of forbidden instinctual aims and objects along with
inhibition in imagination” . Thus, this too-full emptiness is replaced by
another kind of emptiness – one associated with negation as suggested by
Sigmund Freud (1925) but which still leaves room for openness and
development.

The second point concerns the uncanny. A careful analysis of these
micro-depersonalizing moments can serve as a valuable tool and
irreplaceable guide to break out of pre-established frameworks, to venture
into as yet unknown areas of oneself and of the other. Similarly within
love relationships and institutionalized relationships in general, the
pursuit of strangeness can be a corrective element against the danger of
deadening, numbness and monotony that threatens the life of the institution
so profoundly.

A third operational consequence concerns what I propose as an appreciation
of boredom – of course not narcissistic boredom or destructive boredom or
omnipotent, grandiose boredom, but rather the boredom of those who are
exasperated by the lack of a more intense and real human contact. In this
sense, I would almost like to invite us all to get bored a bit more often.
(EUROPEAN PSYCHOLOGY ASSOCIATION]

KR IRS  291025

On Wed, 29 Oct 2025 at 18:35, krishna Rao Khanapur <[email protected]> wrote:

> I use laptop for 3 hours in morning and 2 hours in the evening. Listen to
> carnatic music on you tube on my mobile for 2 hours, current affairs on you
> tube on TV for 2 hours total 9 hours.Sleep hours 10 pm to 6 am.
> Where is the boredom sir ?
>
> KKR
>
> On Wed, 29 Oct 2025, 5:42 pm Suryanarayana Ambadipudi, <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I never get boredom
>> I can’t afford that sort of luxury
>>
>>
>> *A.SURYANARAYANA*
>> *The less you speak,the more you are listened to*
>>
>>
>> On Wed, 29 Oct 2025 at 4:09 PM, Padmanabha Vyasamoorthy <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> When I was bored, I gathered small change (coins) scattered in various
>>> places, sorted them, and put them in different envelopes. The total was not
>>> much - about 1200 rupees.
>>>
>>> What do you do when boredom strikes you?
>>>
>>>
>>> Dr P Vyasamoorthy / 9490804278
>>>
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>>>
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