Better is one handful of quietness than two hands full of toil and grasping after the wind. Ecclesiastes 4:6
Often our lives become so driven that we are moving through our moments to get to better ones at some later point. We live to check things off our to-do list, then fall into bed exhausted at the end of the day, only to jump up the next morning to get on the treadmill once again. This way of living, if we can call it living, is compounded by all the ways in which our lives are now driven by the ever-quickening expectations we place on ourselves and that others place on us and we on them, generated in large measure by our increasing dependence on ubiquitous digital technology and its ever-accelerating effects on our pace of life. If we are not careful, it is all too easy to fall into becoming more of a human doing than a human being, and forget who is doing all the doing, and why.
Jon Kabat Zinn, Mindfulness for Beginners

Reblogged this on A View From The Woods and commented:
Karl Duffy’s blog, Mindful Balance, is always excellent, but today’s really spoke to me loud and clear —
I like your phrase, “more of a human doing than a human being”. I have never thought of it like that, but it is so true. Sometimes, when we get caught up in this life, it is hard to find the difference.