What do you think about when you take a mental break from whatever project or task you’re actually supposed to be working on?
As for myself, I’ve usually got a hobby that I’m working on and I’m visualizing some aspect of the project. Tearing down and rebuilding an engine or some part of the car I’m rebuilding. Designing some mechanical component of another project I’ve started.
Other times it goes into the kinds of threads you’d encounter on the Dope. What would I do in the event of the zombie apocalypse. What would I do if plucked up and tossed a few hundred or thousand years into the past or future.
And of course the usual forays into stuff only suitable for Penthouse Letters.
Excellent question. My husband is thrown by how completely I can disappear mentally when I’m bored. Usually, I’ll revisit a favorite memory or work through the intricacies of the plot of a book I’ve read or movie I’ve seen.
Then of course there’s the internal time I’ve spent with Colin Firth, otherwise known as ‘my children’s future stepfather.’
It used to wander to my writing projects, just getting lost in them, trying to figure out interesting plots and such, but I have hit a very long writer’s block dry spell (one that I’m not entirely sure I am going to recover from) so not so much any more.
My model horse hobby sometimes, what color I’m going to paint this one or that one.
Mainly, right now I am struggling with a deep trek into depression and honestly don’t really do any recreational thinking at the moment.
You guys work so hard when your minds wander. I’m a slug in my dreams.
When my mind wanders it’s to a pristine stretch of beach with the sun on my face and a slight breeze. If I really need the break I stay until I can smell the salt in the water.
How convenient. One of my current projects is steampunk inspired and I’m looking for some assistance with design elements. PM or email me if you’re interested. That goes for anyone else that wants an honorable mention in the project blog.
Sorry to hear about your issue, but ‘recreational thinking’ is exactly the term I was looking for when I started this thread.
This is it 98% of the time for me. The other 2% I’m thinking about my to-do list. If I’m not engaged in a task that requires my full-concentration, I’ve tuned out to some degree so I can pretend I’m living another life.