Activities Are Containers
conceptual-metaphor Containers → Event Structure
Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguistics
What It Brings
We structure activities as bounded regions you can be inside or outside of. This is one of Lakoff and Johnson’s ontological metaphors — the container image schema applied to events and processes. You don’t merely do an activity; you are in it, and the boundary between doing and not-doing is spatial.
Key structural parallels:
- Inside/outside — participation is location. “She’s in the race” places the runner inside a bounded region. “He’s out of the game” places someone beyond its boundary. The binary is sharp: you’re in or you’re out.
- Entry and exit — beginning an activity is entering a container. “She got into gardening” is arrival at a location. “He dropped out of school” is departure. The metaphor makes starting and stopping feel like physical transitions, not abstract state changes.
- Containment implies constraint — being inside an activity means being subject to its rules, its demands, its pressures. “I’m stuck in this project” treats the activity as a space that limits movement. You can be trapped in a job, buried in work.
- Contents can be measured — the container has extent. “There’s a lot in this course” treats the activity’s content as stuff filling a bounded space. A “full schedule” is a container packed to capacity.
The metaphor works because embodied experience provides containers everywhere — rooms, buildings, fields, enclosures. Activities inherit this spatial logic wholesale.
Where It Breaks
- Activities don’t have walls — the container metaphor implies crisp boundaries, but most activities bleed into each other. When does “being in a conversation” end? The metaphor forces binary in/out distinctions onto experiences that are often gradual, partial, and overlapping. You can be half-in a meeting while also being in an email thread, but the container frame makes this feel like a contradiction.
- Containment suggests passivity — being in something implies that the container acts on you. “Stuck in a meeting” makes the meeting the agent and you the trapped contents. This obscures the fact that activities usually require active participation. The container frame encourages a felt sense of helplessness toward activities you are actually choosing.
- The metaphor hides overlap — containers, by definition, don’t interpenetrate. But activities do. Parenting while working, learning while playing — the container metaphor makes multitasking feel like being in two places at once, which is why it feels cognitively stressful even when the activities are compatible.
- Entry requirements vanish — a physical container has a door or opening. The metaphor preserves “getting into” an activity but drops the mechanics. How do you actually enter a profession, a hobby, a social circle? The spatial metaphor replaces process with a single threshold crossing.
Expressions
- “She’s in the race” — participation as spatial containment
- “He got out of the washing” — ceasing an activity as exiting a space
- “I’m deep into this project” — degree of involvement as depth within a container
- “She threw herself into her work” — vigorous participation as forceful entry
- “He’s in over his head” — involvement exceeding capacity, the container filling above the contained person
- “There’s nothing in that activity for me” — the container is empty of value
- “She’s stuck in a dead-end job” — the container has become a trap
- “Get into the habit” — habitual activity as a container you enter and remain in
Origin Story
Lakoff and Johnson discuss ontological metaphors in Chapter 6 of Metaphors We Live By, showing how the container image schema — one of the most basic structures of embodied experience — extends to activities, events, and states. ACTIVITIES ARE CONTAINERS is a specific instance of their broader claim that we impose container structure on virtually everything we experience. The examples span from everyday (“in the race”) to institutional (“in the army”), demonstrating how pervasive the mapping is.
References
- Lakoff, G. & Johnson, M. Metaphors We Live By (1980), Chapter 6
- Johnson, M. The Body in the Mind (1987) — extended analysis of the container image schema
- Lakoff, G. Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things (1987) — container schemas in category structure