![]() ![]() He gives three steps to begin enjoying dolce far niente: start small, just five minutes a day. Arthur Brooks, writing in The Atlantic, says that “learning to do nothing is good for us,” and, he suspects, actually makes us happier. ![]() ![]() Italians have a phrase for it: “ dolce far niente,” or the “sweetness of doing nothing.” In our culture that prizes busyness, we could learn a thing or two about the value of doing nothing.
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