-
It
is selfish to indulge in personal, fun things.
-
It
takes away from family unity to indulge in individual, fun activities.
-
One
must maintain a serious outlook on life in order to survive.
-
Athletics
are just for ``jocks.''
-
You
should never engage in anything work-like unless you are paid for it.
-
Taking
care of oneself is OK for the ``other guy'' but not for me.
-
To
have fun takes a lot of money. Only the rich have fun.
-
Fun
is illusive or unobtainable.
-
The
only fun things are immoral, illicit, illegal, or fattening.
-
Fun
and play is bad if it becomes an end in itself.
-
I
feel so guilty when I'm doing nothing, relaxing.
-
The
only real relaxation is sleep.
-
I
don't have time for fun.
-
Having
fun at work or school is foolish, immature, and irresponsible.
-
I
can't relax when I have nothing to do.
-
What
will people think of me if they see me acting so unprofessional!
-
It's
OK to have fun once in awhile, but you have to come back to reality.
-
It
is impossible to have fun when you are loaded down with all my
responsibilities.
-
A
fun activity is such a waste of time!
-
I'll
wait until I retire to enjoy myself.
-
We
can't relax until we are financially secure.
-
You
have got to be crazy to enjoy that!
-
One
must be ``serious'' about one's extracurricular activities to be a
successful, to be a winner.
-
How
can I maintain my image of authority if I have fun with my children, co-workers,
students, etc.
-
It
is impossible to coordinate everyone's schedule so that we can have ``fun
times'' together.
-
The
only way I can have fun is to be drinking, using drugs, gambling, eating,
shopping, having sex, smoking, or working.
-
Having
an evening picnic by candlelight in the backyard
-
Camping
in the backyard all night
-
Having
a late dinner (after ten) by candlelight either on the back porch, under the
stars, or in your home with soft music playing
-
Taking
a walk at dawn, relishing the sunrise
-
Taking
a fancy dinner with china, silver service, and candles to the park,
especially if there is a free concert
-
Having
a caterer come in to provide a full meal for your family
-
Starting
a food fight with your family or children
-
Taking
a long bath in scented water with candles and romantic music
-
Body
painting your partner
-
Spending
a night in a gaudy motel with water beds, mirrored walls, and hot tubs in
the bathroom
-
Playing
queen for a day and pampering yourself
-
Having
your partner function as your slave for the day
-
Taking
a mental health day or a "who cares'' day off from work
-
Paying
the toll for the person behind you on a toll bridge or on an expressway
-
Holding
a roast or tribute for a family member or friend
-
Holding
a "no reason'' party or an "un-birthday'' party
-
Wading
in fountains at midnight
-
Drawing
love notes on the sand in the evening
-
Breaking
a tradition, such as doing something other than roasting a turkey on
Thanksgiving
Step
1: Before you can develop a plan to increase the amount of
fun in your life, you must recognize to what extent you allow fun to enter
your life. Answer the following questions in your journal:
a.
What does fun mean to you?
b.
How do you know when you are having fun?
c.
How do you feel when you are having fun?
d.
What barriers keep you from having fun?
e.
How real are these barriers?
f.
What blocking beliefs keep you from having fun?
g.
What replacement beliefs do you
need in order to have more fun?
h.
What new behavior do you need to develop in order to have more fun?
i.
What strategies could you follow to insure more fun in your life?
j.
Review the sample list of creative fun activities.
Step
2: Once you have a picture of how you react to fun in your
life, you are ready for the fun self-analysis activity:
Create
a chart in your journal with six columns: Fun Activities, Date, Expense,
Persons, Time, and Years. Use the following directions to
fill in the chart and to answer the questions about your values concerning
fun:
a.
Brainstorm a list of at least forty fun activities. If you can think of
more than forty, continue the first column until your brainstorming is
exhausted. How hard or easy was it for you to do this first task?
b.
Under the ``date'' column indicate when you last did each of the fun
activities. Review the results of the completed date column. How can you
reconcile your use of time in carrying out activities that are fun and
enjoyable for you?
c.
Under the ``expense'' column indicate the cost of each fun activity
listed, i.e., free, under $5, $15 to $25, $25 to $50, $50 to $100, over $100.
Review the results of the completed expense column. How expensive is fun for
you? Do you unwittingly price yourself out of fun?
d.
Under the ``persons'' column indicate whether each fun activity is done
alone, with another person, with family, with a group, etc. Once you have
completed the ``persons'' column, review your responses. How important are
people in your fun activities? What role do your spouse, lover, family,
friends play in these activities? Is fun rare because you only do it with
certain people? How comfortable are you with yourself? How much do you depend
on others in order to have fun?
e.
Under the ``time'' column indicate if each fun activity is usually done
on vacations (large blocks of time), weekends, or daily (consistently). Review
the results of the ``time'' column. Does most fun and enjoyment get postponed
for large blocks of time? Do your ``large block of time'' fun activities cost
a lot, need a great deal of planning with others, and thus are infrequently
experienced?
f.
Under the ``years'' column indicate how many more years you can
envision yourself enjoying each of the fun activities listed. Is each fun
activity temporary or lifelong? Review the results of the ``years'' column. If
the fun activity is temporary, what keeps you from participating in it now
while you can enjoy it? What makes the fun activity lifelong versus temporary
for you?
g.
Once you have completed the charts answer the following questions in
your journal:
1.
What did this activity tell you about the fun in your life?
2.
How many of the fun activities listed did you experience in the past
year?
3.
How many of the fun activities listed are daily events?
4.
How great a barrier to your having fun now is the phrase, ``I'm too
busy?''
5.
How great a barrier to your having fun now is ``It's too expensive'' or
``It costs too much money?''
6.
How great a barrier to your having fun now is ``It can't be done
alone?''
7.
How great a barrier to your having fun now is ``It takes too much
time?''
8.
How great a barrier to your having fun now is ``I have a lifetime in
which to do that?''
9.
How valid are your excuses for not having fun?
Step
3: Once you have completed your fun self-analysis, you are
ready to make a fun plan of action. In your journal write your plan of action
following this outline:
My
goal is to recapture fun in my life. I intend to put fun in my life according
to this plan of action:
a.
I will schedule the following time daily for a ``fun'' activity:
The
following activities will be part of my daily ``fun'' schedule:
b.
I will schedule the following time for a weekly ``fun'' activity:
The
following activities will be part of my weekly ``fun'' schedule:
c.
I will schedule the following time for a monthly ``fun'' activity:
The
following activities will be alternatives for my monthly ``fun'' schedule:
d.
I will schedule the following time for a yearly ``fun'' activity:
The
following activities will be alternatives for my yearly ``fun'' schedule:
e.
I will tell one joke a day.
f.
I will have a good, healthy laugh every day.
g.
I will change my schedule, breaking a tradition, to let flexibility
into my life. (For example, drive a different way to work, speak to
one new person every day, turn the TV off for 24 hours.)