Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Finding a hobby that gives joy

- Ask Carolyn Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at facebook.com/carolyn.hax

Dear Carolyn: So, my partner and I are giving up on our efforts to birth or adopt a child, and I have decided to make the next year one of filling my life with things that make me excited to be alive. A number of my friends have hobbies they are super passionate about, and communitie­s of friends they have met through those hobbies, and I’m envious and a bit mystified. I have thought of copying one of them, but none of the specific pursuits – biking, knitting, gastropubs, spoken word – specifically interests me. Maybe I’m a boring person, but it’s hard for me to visualize myself doing something with my free time other than watching my favorite TV show du jour.

My partner works 70-hour weeks as an EMT and doesn’t seem to have the same problem; he comes home, hangs out with me, goes to sleep, gets up and goes back to work. How do I find the hobby that suits my personalit­y and gives me joy – and with it, the tribe of new friends I have been hoping for? — Hobby Envy

Hobby Envy: I’m so sorry your familybuil­ding plans didn’t work out for you.

Maybe a hobby isn’t the right direction for you now, though; maybe you’re better suited for a cause?

Just before reading your question, I listened to an interview with the superinten­dent of a large urban school system, and I was reminded – again, it seems constant these days – of the staggering amount of need among U.S. children. Need for food assistance, need for reading buddies or (when it’s safe again) oneon-one tutoring, need for counseling, need for health care, need for clothing and basic hygiene supplies, need for school materials, need for repairs to crumbling infrastruc­ture.

Your efforts to build a family say you care deeply about children – and that’s something you can keep doing even if the children aren’t your own. Maybe now you can have even more, or just broader, impact.

You can start small by checking with your local school to see what their volunteer needs and protocols are. If that’s too painful right now, too soon, then consider something more arm’s length, like collecting coats or books or other supplies for needy kids. You have time, energy and a craving for meaning, which says you have so much to give.

This doesn’t mean, by the way, that hobbies are out. Keep dabbling, keep trying. And TV itself has communitie­s, if you pick up a show with a following.

Re: Hobby: Are you a boring person or a contented person?

My feeling as a longtime reader is that you get a lot of questions from people who ask you how to get to Point B only because the societal expectatio­n is Point B, when they are actually content being at Point A. It’s OK not to have hobbies and to spend your time watching your TV show du jour, if that’s what you want to do. — Anonymous

Anonymous: Team Point A!

I hope you don’t mean to suggest it’s wrong to be boring, though.

 ?? Carolyn Hax ??
Carolyn Hax

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