Have you ever
wondered where all your time goes?
You’re not
alone. People have been talking about time for centuries.
Consider this excerpt from “The Book of Fate,” written by Voltaire in the
17th century: “Of all the things in the world, which is the longest
and shortest, the quickest and the slowest, the most divisible and the most
extensive, the most disregarded and the most regretted, without which
nothing can happen, which devours everything that is little, and gives life
everything that is great?
“The answer is time. Nothing is longer, since it is the measure of
eternity. Nothing is shorter, since it is lacking in all our
plans. Nothing is slower for him who waits. Nothing is quicker
for him who enjoys. It extends to the infinitely little. All
men disregard it. All men regret the loss of it. Nothing happens
without it. It makes forgotten everything unworthy of posterity, and
it immortalizes the great things.”
I have a saying
that I’ve often used – “Killing time isn’t murder; it’s suicide.” We
all start out in life with one thing in common; we all have the same amount
of time each day, each week, each month and each year. Now it’s just
a matter of what we do with it.
I’ve seen estimates that the average person spends seven years in the bathroom,
six years eating, four years cleaning house, five years waiting in line,
two years trying to return phone calls to people who aren’t there, three
years preparing meals, one year searching for misplaced items and six
months sitting at red traffic lights.
That’s nearly 30 years and doesn’t include a lot of what you might need or
want to do. Prioritizing your time should be a top priority.
Getting more done
doesn’t always mean doing more things. Sometimes it’s about doing
less. Don’t try to schedule every minute of every day. When you
make and prioritize your to-do list, leave yourself some flexibility to
handle interruptions and unplanned tasks that are bound to come up during
the day. You should block out segments of your day for important tasks,
but be sure to reserve enough time so that you don’t have to rush through
things. Taking your time can sometimes be the best use of your
time.
Do you need to
manage your time better at work? Who doesn’t? One of the first
things you have to take control of is your time. It always seems like
there’s not enough time to accomplish everything when you’re working hard,
but Bob Nelson in 1,001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work, says
there are some steps you can take to rescue your time. |
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