What ever happened to slowing down? For the last couple of decades, we’ve bemoaned the speed of life and promised to spend more time savouring the moment. But here we are, still busy, still bombarded with messages, still running late all the time.
Or are we?
A ComRes poll commissioned by the UK’s Chief Rabbi for ShabbatUK found that 52% of Brits say they sit down with family for a meal every day. A further 24% eat with loved ones at least once a week. Those meals, though, aren’t always the peaceful moments we imagine. Most of us (61%) have the television turned on or will answer the phone if it rings mid-meal.
And yet quality time is something we worry about. In the US, 56% of working mothers and 50% of working dads say they find it difficult to find the right balance. The UK Chief Rabbi’s research found that nearly three in five people wish they could spend more time with loved ones without being interrupted by technology.
Most religions, of course, have long traditions of reflection and rest; rhythms that benefit those around us as much as ourselves. There’s a Hadith – a teaching in the Muslim tradition – that talks about slowing down as a tool in anger management: If anyone of you becomes angry and is standing, let him sit down so his anger will go away; if it does not go away, let him lie down.
Taking a break can be an opportunity to put daily routines into an eternal perspective.
“Our daily prayers are part of pausing,” says Farah Elahi, whose Runnymede Trust report on Islamophobia was published last week. “We wash our hands before praying and think about what our hands have been doing that day; we wash our mouths and think about the words we have spoken. It helps us to go into prayer being mindful of the moment we are in and the way we have been treating people.”
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