Time: The Great Equalizer
The phrase ‘time management’ has become one of the
most oft-repeated phrases of our society. Almost
everyone thinks they need to improve their time
management skills. The problem is that most people
aren’t even examining what the real issue is. Instead,
the average person will blame time itself. Think I am
kidding? Let me demonstrate.
When I attend a social or business function and
people discover that I am a productivity expert, the
topic often turns to ‘time management.’ Many people will
invariably say some version of, “I don’t have any time.”
To which I then usually reply, “Actually, you have the
same 24 hours in your day that every other human being
has. What you’re really telling me is that you don’t
like the way you are spending your time, or you have not
been able to prioritize your tasks to maximize that 24
hours.” I usually get a long pause, and then if the
person ‘gets it,’ he or she will have a small epiphany
and reply, “Yes, that’s it! I wish I were managing my
time better. I’m feeling out of balance.”
The reason that this common time management
description irks me so much is that it essentially gives
the person an excuse by blaming time itself, when the
real issue generally lies with the person. While there
may be some real issues involved that cause a person to
get into a time management jam, it is also often the
person’s lack of planning, procrastination, and failure
to adequately prioritize that causes the time crunch.
People are not overwhelmed with time itself, but with
what they fill that time with – all of the tasks and
responsibilities that make up their busy schedules. That
overwhelmed feeling is a lack of control over the
passing of time. And that would actually be correct
because no matter how hard you try, you cannot control
the passing of time.
No matter how organized you are and how much you plan
ahead, the reality of life steps in. Good time
management techniques are in place so that when life
throws you a curve ball, you can hit it and get back on
base. You need techniques to put your plans into action
so that you can avoid, to the extent possible, the time
crunches that can come between you and your best life.
The phrase “time management” is itself an oxymoron.
You can’t manage time, only what you choose to do with
it. I often tell my clients that if I could invent a
time machine and give them all a 25th hour in the day, I
would. But until that amazing feat occurs (be patient,
I’m working on it), we are all left on even playing
field.
Indeed, time is the great equalizer. As Denis Waitley
puts it, “Time is an equal opportunity employer.
Each human being has exactly the same number of hours
and minutes each day. Rich people can’t buy more hours.
Scientists can’t invent new minutes. And you can’t save
time to spend it on another day.” Wise words.
Another phrase that I often hear is “Time is money.”
This is actually a bit of a loaded topic for me. As a
former practicing attorney, I am all too familiar with
what it means to sell your time as a commodity. You are
essentially selling your time (i.e., your life) in
six-minute increments. The only valuable time is
billable time. The decision to spend time doing anything
other than billable work must be justified. It’s no
wonder that chief among a host of reasons for the high
dissatisfaction among lawyers is the pressure of high
billable-hours requirements in large firms, which leads
to a serious lack of life-work balance.
Time isn’t money – time is life itself. No amount of
money in the world can buy a minute or an hour. That
moment that just passed while you were reading that last
sentence is now gone forever. To me, that is more of a
motivator than money. I can make another dollar in my
lifetime, but I can’t get back that moment. However,
because time is so forgiving, I can start over each day,
hoping to live it to the fullest and use all of its 24
hours in the best way possible.
So let the connection between time and life itself be
the impetus you need for managing your time better.
“Dost thou love life, then do not squander time, for
that is the stuff life is made of.” ~ Benjamin
Franklin
Copyright © 2009 Lisa Montanaro of LM Organizing
Solutions, LLC.
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Copyright 2009. Lisa Montanaro is a Productivity
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is the author of The Ultimate Life Organizer: An
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Lisa also publishes the DECIDE™ to be Organized blog at
www.DecideToBeOrganized.com. Through her work,
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