Psychopathy : Boredom
Boredom lurks.
. It is a state of existence that wishes to become all too familiar to me, as if it were an unwelcome but inevitable companion. I will never let it be that companion. It is quick to make its presence known, descending with undue haste to wrap its beige being about me, reducing the remarkable to the mundane. What began as scintillating becomes soporific. I find it fascinating (at least for a time) that there are those who sit slack-jawed watching the same events pass around them, the same faces, the same words and the same dull,dull, dull behaviours. How have they such a tolerance for the tedious? They rise into a world that was exactly the same as the day before and the day before that and it will continue with such mind-numbing lifelessness as they hurtle into the humdrum.
Boredom appears and with predictable monotony and seeks to settle into every corner of my mind, like a thick fog that weighs down my thoughts and stifles any sparks of interest or enthusiasm. It renders the passing of time as an interminable stretch, removing any sense of urgency or purpose that usually propels me forward.
It will, if I lower my guard and allow it supremacy, take hold of my senses without any apparent rhyme or reason, causing me to question the very notion of purpose and productivity. It’s as if the world around me is a vast stage, but I find myself without a script or a role to play.
As the hours stretch on, my mind wanders to motivations and desires. The tumbling cascade of thoughts and wants that are necessary to stave off this boredom. Such is my remarkable nature that I have so many options, so many opportunities wherein I can seek out the fresh, the invigorating and cast asunder the advancing creep of boredom. Yet, it is like a relentless tide for no sooner have I alleviated the tedium that it starts to make its presence felt once more and thus I seek out a differing taste, a new sight, an unfamiliar sound or an altogether unexperienced occasion. How do the lower orders survive without such a lively mind and access to opportunity? Have they evolved differently? Are they content with the monotone? Is it somehow comforting and familiar to them? How can they not want to change, to disrupt, to alleviate, to mix-up, to explode? How is it that they are content to sit like sacks of supine drudgery, gawping at the same world around them? How can it be that there is no chaos engine within them that seeks to matter?
Boredom wriggles through any cracks in my psyche, settling in as though it were entitled to being present. It is an emotion that resists my attempts to engage with it; instead, it prefers to linger in the background, taunting my desire for stimulation. Bring me sweet salvation through stimulation for I have become a master of it. I seek it, drive it, create it.
I notice the disinterest that accompanies boredom, as my gaze wanders aimlessly and my attention drifts from one mundane thing to another. The world loses its luster, and even the most captivating activities and experiences seem drab and unappealing. There is a curious numbness that pervades my perception, an indifference towards the once exciting and vibrant aspects of life. No, this is the grip of boredom once again trying to make me like all of them. I reject it. I will find the stimulation that I need, no matter what the cost.
In these moments, boredom takes on a peculiar duality. It is both an absence of stimulation and a lack of emotional investment. It disconnects me from the present, obscuring any opportunities for connection or engagement. And yet, it is also a reminder that I am free to roam in the vast expanse of my own thoughts, unburdened by external demands or expectations.
Boredom, in its peculiar way, serves as an invitation to explore the limits of my own mental landscape. It sets the stage, creative breakthroughs. I find opportunity in the idea that boredom as for me as catalyst for renewed inspiration or merited discoveries.
I refuse to accept that boredom is a natural part of the human experience, a companion that arrives unannounced and leaves just as silently. I acknowledge its presence, observe its impact,elsewhere and now ensure I bring about the inevitability of its eventual departure.
I observe boredom with judgement and complete resistance. I see it as a temporary state, a passing phase that must not be allowed to settle on me, for others it is simply an intrinsic part of life., for them it is a reminder that not every moment will be filled with excitement or purpose and that is why I have never been like the lower orders.
I am able to see beyond the surface level discomfort that boredom can bring. Instead of feeling frustrated or restless, I am able to embrace the necessity of driving forward, of bringing forth stimulation, often through the playing of games using those appliances that I find around me. The lurking nature of boredom means that the games must always be played and I am the player of those games, stimulated, enriched and invigorated. With boredom dispelled, I am surging, tearing my way through the world around me, drawing in, consuming and jettisoning, all in the name of stimulation.
Boredom also presents an opportunity for me to exercise my creativity. In the absence of external stimuli, I can delve into the vast expanse of my imagination. I find myself exploring new ideas, engaging in artistic expression, or seeking out new hobbies to alleviate the monotony. This detached perspective allows me to detach myself from the weight of boredom and approach it as an opportunity for intellectual exploration. I have no emotional attachment to anybody. I have no care or concern for them. Worry is a stranger in my land. This absence of connection to others frees up so much time for me for I need not channel my assets towards people save where I deem it some great reward for me. Unburdened by the compassion and care of emotional empathy, I am freed and given so much more, but with that comes the prospect of boredom. Thus, I must preserve my freedom through the pursuit of stimulation.
Boredom comes and boredom must be repelled for it is entirely true that since boredom must not be allowed to take root within me, I must neither be bored or boring.



BO, what’s further occurred to me: on top of HG’s creativity, curiosity and imagination he maintains what imaginative and creative individuals often struggle to maintain — discipline. Very creative individuals are often battling emotional battles which hinder their progress. Narcissists on the opposite, driven by the necessity to obtain fuel, appear with more persistence within their fields. I don’t have the overview on the proportion but I dare say there are very few imaginative, creative and disciplined individuals, few creative and undisciplined individuals, and less creative and imaginative individuals who are dictating the standards of creativity, simply because they’re more driven to reach the top and reach as many people as possible i.e. expand their fuel-matrix.
Creative and disciplined empaths don’t have that need. They live and breathe their creativity in their simple lives.
I agree with what you wrote about children and authority figures “shutting them down”. It’s an overall educational issue. The parameters of the society are set on a current which caters more to the narcissist’s or narcissistic needs. The higher emotionally oriented empath will naturally struggle in those waters. To maintain their ground. It can also lead to checking out of the process and boredom takes over.
Succombing to boredom is a sign of an underdeveloped (or inhibited!) imagination.
Children think of lots of fun things to do, but those instincts are systematically (“logically”) shut down by authority figures until children learn to shut down their instinctive creativity.
Entertainment comes in limitless forms. If it can only come by way of hurting other people, that is a limitation of imagination in itself.
I disagree. I have a vibrant imagination, it serves me well in ensnaring people. For instance, it enabled me to create so many worlds when I was the Dungeon Master, a position I held unchallenged for years as nobody came close to me in envisaging campaigns and scenarios in the way I did.
Is that not exactly what you are doing, using your imagination? You are not succumbing to boredom at all, you are simply noticing it and then you find something to stop it. Neither is it the case that you find entertainment only in hurting other people, far from it. And it is not as if children do not feel boredom, just take a long road trip with them and see them start to ask “How long until we get there?”
BO, furthermore, HG’s imagination and creativity allowed him to create an unrivaled body of work no other educational leader has come up with. Whether in written form, articles, books, audio, narration, music, parody, storytelling, riddles in the Knowing HG Series, or in communication with his readers, there’s broad creativity, imagination, whisk and humor…
To state it only comes in the way of hurting people would be inaccurate.
Dungeon Master, or DM for short. Funny that. The dungeons have grown a bit!
Hello HG:
1. Do you think boredom and imagination are linked? I don’t. You definitely are imaginative. Duh. I see it more as you have a need for stimulus. Intense experiences to achieve a higher level of excitement than others need and perhaps a need for instant gratification and that’s not always easy for anyone. Imagination is not necessarily tied to stimuli and excitement. This I think there is a restlessness like a panther pacing in a cage. Angelina Jolie has the same why she tattooed the phrase “A prayer for the wild at heart kept in cages” by Tennessee Williams. 2. Am I right? If not for the ultra, am I right as to other psychopaths? 4. By the way was Tennessee Williams a narc or psychopath? When you see A Street Car Named Desire, or Cat on a Hot Tin roof or The Glass Menergarie ( based on his own family) he at least understood the dynamics.
Thanks x
No, I do not see boredom and imagination being linked. I have an extensive imagination but I get bored of certain things quickly.