Reading
Part 5 - Long Text
Answer multiple-choice questions about a text. You are expected to understand a text for detail, opinion, tone, purpose, main idea, implication and attitude. For questions 1-0 choose the correct answer.
The Quiet Power of Boredom
For years, boredom has been treated as a minor personal failing: a sign you lack imagination, discipline, or the correct app. Yet the modern world has become remarkably efficient at preventing it. A spare minute in a queue is instantly filled with headlines, messages, and short videos that end just as your attention begins to drift. The result is not constant engagement so much as constant interruption, and it raises an awkward question: if we never allow ourselves to be bored, what exactly are we avoiding? One answer is that boredom is uncomfortable because it exposes the mind’s restlessness. When there is nothing obvious to do, we become aware of the itch to do *something*, even if that something is trivial. Psychologists sometimes describe boredom as a signal: it tells us that our current activity is not meaningful enough to hold our attention. In that sense, boredom is not the absence of stimulation but the presence of dissatisfaction. It is a nudge—occasionally a shove—towards change. This is why attempts to eliminate boredom entirely can backfire. If every lull is patched over with easy entertainment, we may never notice that we are dissatisfied in the first place. The quick fix works, but only briefly; it replaces the original emptiness with a thin layer of noise. Over time, the mind can become trained to expect constant novelty, and ordinary tasks—reading a long article, learning a skill, even holding a conversation without glancing at a screen—start to feel strangely demanding. The problem is not that these activities have become harder, but that our tolerance for slow reward has weakened. There is, however, a more constructive way to interpret boredom: as a doorway to deeper attention. Anyone who has tried to write, compose music, or solve a complex problem knows that the first stage often feels like staring at a blank wall. Ideas do not arrive on command; they emerge after a period of apparent nothingness. In that gap, the mind begins to wander, connect unrelated memories, and test possibilities. What looks like idleness from the outside can be intense mental work. Research into mind-wandering supports this. When people are given undemanding tasks—sorting cards, walking familiar routes, washing dishes—their thoughts frequently drift to unresolved concerns and future plans. This can be irritating, but it can also be useful. The brain appears to use low-stimulation moments to organise information, rehearse social situations, and explore alternatives. In other words, boredom can create the conditions in which reflection becomes possible. Of course, not all boredom is beneficial. There is a difference between the mild boredom of a quiet afternoon and the grinding boredom of work that is repetitive, tightly controlled, and devoid of autonomy. The latter is linked to stress, low motivation, and even risky behaviour, as people seek intensity simply to feel awake. Romanticising boredom would be as misguided as demonising it. The point is not to suffer needlessly, but to recognise that some forms of boredom are informative rather than harmful. This is where the current obsession with productivity becomes relevant. Many people feel guilty when they are not actively achieving something measurable. Yet creativity and judgement rarely operate like factory output. They require incubation: time in which nothing seems to happen. If we treat every pause as wasted time, we will fill it with distractions and then wonder why we feel scattered. The irony is that the very moments we label “unproductive” may be the ones in which our thinking becomes clearer. A practical response does not require abandoning technology or moving to a cabin in the woods. It can be as simple as leaving small gaps unfilled: walking without headphones, waiting without scrolling, letting a thought finish before replacing it. These are modest acts, but they restore a basic mental skill: the ability to stay with a feeling of emptiness long enough for it to turn into curiosity. Boredom, handled well, is not a void to escape. It is a space in which the mind can finally hear itself.
Answer the Questions
For each question, choose the correct answer
1. In the first paragraph, the writer suggests that modern life mainly prevents boredom by
2. What does the writer imply about boredom in the second paragraph?
3. According to the third paragraph, what is a likely consequence of constantly seeking novelty?
4. In the fourth paragraph, the writer’s point about creative work is that
5. What distinction does the writer make in the sixth paragraph?
6. Overall, the writer’s attitude to boredom is that it
Instructions
Answer multiple-choice questions about a text. You are expected to understand a text for detail, opinion, tone, purpose, main idea, implication and attitude. For questions 1-0 choose the correct answer.
Exercise Details
Author
Alyrah Tellez
@alyrah-tellez
User Prompt
"Generate a Reading & Use of English Long Text exercise for level C1 in the style of the original Cambridge English exam."
Created on:
Apr 9, 2026
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