"busy"

When I ask people how they're doing - especially work colleagues, but others too - many reply "busy". I never quite understood what the word meant, but for a long while, I assumed it was an actual description of their objective circumstances: so many demands on their time that they cannot stop to think, more work than any human could possibly handle, various pressures, etc. And I developed a certain guilt, because I so rarely feel "busy" - never for more than a few hours anyway. I am a perpetual slacker, who lets others take the burden and goes off on a stroll? Should I make myself more busy?Yesterday, at a friend's birthday party, I heard the 'b' word mentioned again from another work colleague I don't know very much. I decided it was time to ask, and I did "what does busy mean, I've never actually understood the word." She had an interesting answer "when you've got so much to do that you don't have time to answer emails, and feel a bit dizzy." "Oh, I've never been in that state, or at least never for more than two or three hours." She called me lucky - slightly peeved, or jealous? And left.I reflected. When I was in high school, and then in preparatory class, I always finished my essays and assignments on time, even a day early. I may have been the only one. People saw me as a strange oddity. The feeling was mutual. We had three weeks to finish a paper, the paper took between 15 and 20 hours to finish. Surely, the right time to start was not the evening before. Yet half the class did, and a good third only got to it a few days in advance. I could see that I was the odd one out, and yet I thought - if you started on time, you wouldn't rush at the end.I've now realised it's the same with 'busy'. Surely these 'busy' people are in the state not because they do more than me, but because they live with a backlog of things to do - just like people (the same busy people?) live with a constant negative credit balance, and only use their income to pay off their debt. But when they finish something, they don't do some extra time to scale down their backlog, they just mop around. New deadlines arrive, and pile up. So that's what 'busy' means: I have a debt of things to do that's running after me, yet I never get on to it. I over-committed in the past, and never took the pain to renegociate my load. People are waiting for me to do things, and I'm holding them back.But it's not only that. "Busy" people will make you believe (maybe they actually believe) that holding back others makes them important. There's a dark side to 'busy' people, so let's be suspicious of them - and let's not pity them too much. Let's laugh at their scuttling around; and if something's important, let's keep the "busy" people away from it.