We have all been in the flow** and relish these moments. This is where one is engaged in an activity which is both high in challenge, but matched with a high level of personal skill. Awareness of time disappears, one is totally absorbed in the task at hand and in a state of peace, joy and total presence in the moment. In sports, the experience of flow is described as being “in the zone”. The importance of having a high degree of personal control over your circumstance makes the flow that much more authentic. By contrast, the opposite of flow is apathy or boredom, where one is using few of one’s skills, and the level of task challenge is low, with generally limited autonomy.
There are challenges to being in the flow, and they can be overcome. A good place to start is to appreciate the importance of deliberately combining high levels of challenge and skill together. The synergy of skill and challenge can motivate you to design part of your career or leisure time to allow for more flow situations.
Creatively and carefully look at your job or leisure time and consider where there are opportunities to develop new skills or challenging opportunities. Look at some of your more frequent but boring or less satisfying obligations and see if they can be re-engineered to being more skillful or challenging. I disliked the exams marking aspect of university lecturing. Subsequently I re-engineered the exam papers, questions, answer booklets, grade allocation/calibration, marking pens, marking space and work space arrangement such that grading was more skillful and properly challenging (though never a joy). Also see where there are opportunities for increased autonomy and design activities for skill improvement and challenge.
The awesome thing about flow is that by deliberately embedding it into your daily rituals, your occupational and intellectual well-being improves (two of the seven aspect of wellness).
**: Mihály Csíkszentmihályi coined and researched flow extensively. The TedTalk video noted below provides more details on flow:
www.ted.com/talks/mihaly_csikszentmihalyi_on_flow?language=af
Reflection Source: www.Smallercup.org
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