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  • Hello. This is 6 Minute English from

  • BBC Learning English. I’m Beth.  

  • And I’m Neil. Phew! I've  spent all day in meetings,

  • then shopping, then collecting  the kids from school - I'm

  • exhausted, Beth! What have  you been doing today?

  • Oh, not much, just sitting around doing

  • nothingrelaxing and kicking back! Lucky you! Don’t you have work to do?

  • It may not look it, Neil, but I’m actually as

  • busy as a bee! If youve seen nature documentaries

  • about worker bees flying from flower to flower,

  • you probably think animals are always on the move.

  • But the surprising truth  is, away from the cameras,

  • most animals spend most of the time  doing absolutely nothing at all.

  • In the natural world where  finding food and shelter

  • is hard work, why have some  animals evolved to do nothing?

  • And if it’s good enough for  animals, would being lazy work

  • for humans too? That’s what  we will be discussing in this

  • programme, and as usual, well be learning some

  • useful new vocabulary as well. But first, let me work up the energy to ask you

  • a question, Neil. Of course, some animals have

  • a reputation for lounging  aboutlions, for example,

  • can sleep up to twenty  hours a day! But what is the

  • slowest moving animal on Earth? Is it: a) the giant tortoise  

  • b) the three-toed sloth or c) the koala?

  • Well, I think it’s the three-toed sloth.

  • OK, Neil. I’ll reveal the  correct answer at the end

  • of the programme. Now it’s  no surprise that lazy lions

  • love relaxing, but even  animals with reputations for

  • being busy spend time doing  nothing. Look carefully

  • into an ant's nest and youll see around half

  • of them just sitting there motionless.

  • Here’s Professor Dan  Charbonneau, an expert in insect

  • behaviour, discussing the lazy  rock ant with Emily Knight,

  • presenter of BBC Radio 4 programme, Naturebang.

  • Dan’s research has focused  on ant colonies, a species

  • called temnothorax rugatulus or the rock ant.

  • I think ants are a symbol of  industriousness, you know,

  • they have this whole tiny  little society going on that's

  • kind of similar to ours…  some idealised version what

  • humans might be if we could  only pull it together and

  • all work together we could be as industrious as

  • the ants, but then when you  look at it, roughly about

  • half the colony is inactive at any given time.  

  • We think ants are industrious, or hard-working.

  • Groups of ants, called colonies, seem tiny,

  • perfect societies where everyone works

  • hard for the good of the group. Then why are so many of them inactive?

  • One possible answer is that theyre reserve ants,

  • ready to step in if disease or disaster strike.

  • But could it simply be that they don’t work

  • because they don’t need to. Would you get out

  • of bed on Monday morning if you didn’t have to? Maybe the ants can teach us a thing or

  • two about relaxing. But wouldn't it get

  • boring just sitting around all day? Not according to psychologist, Dr Sandi Mann.

  • She thinks being productiveworking to produce

  • a lot for the amount of resources we use,

  • is overrated. Boredom has its benefits too,

  • as she explains to BBC Radio  4 programme, Naturebang.  

  • Would humans have invented bread or beer or fire,

  • you know, if we hadn't been  bored and were wondering,

  • what on earth would happen  if we mix this with this?’,

  • you know. Are all these sorts of

  • inventions the mother of boredom? But in this world of constant stimulation

  • switching off is harder than it's ever been. That's why we're constantly swiping and scrolling

  • and looking for the next big thing, and the

  • new thing and we bored of things very quicklyso

  • it's a kind of paradox to  get rid of this unpleasant

  • state of boredom is actually to

  • allow more boredom into your life. Dr Mann doubts humans would have invented

  • things without the curiosity that comes from being

  • bored. Boredom is the mother of invention,

  • an idea based on the famous proverb, necessity is

  • the mother of invention, an idiom meaning that if

  • you really need to do something,

  • you will think of a way of doing it. Instead of fearing boredom we can open up to its

  • benefits by switching off - stopping worrying or

  • thinking about something  and relaxing. Slowing down

  • helps too - something we can definitely

  • learn from our animal cousins. I think now’s a good time to reveal the answer to

  • my question, since we have nothing else to do.

  • You asked me to name the  world’s slowest animal and

  • I guessed it was the three-toed  sloth. Was I right?

  • That was the correct answer! With a top speed

  • of 30 centimetres per minutethree-toed sloths move

  • so slowly that algae grow on their coats!

  • OK, let's recap the vocabulary that we've learned

  • from this programme starting with the

  • phrase kicking backstop doing things

  • and relax completely.

  • The adjective industrious means hard-working. A colony is the name given to a group of certain

  • animals including ants and some seabirds. Someone who is productive is able to produce

  • a lot for the amount of resources they use. The proverb necessity is the mother of invention,

  • means that if you really need to do something,

  • you will think of a way of doing it. And finally, to switch off means to stop worrying

  • or thinking about something and relax. Once again,

  • our six minutes are upit  must be time to sit down,

  • close your eyes, and just do  nothing! Goodbye for now!  

  • Bye!

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