This WSJ article about tracking the amount of time for you to do anything is pretty interesting.
If you believe results from the American Time Use Survey, done by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and other studies, plenty of Americans have faulty impressions of how they spend time in our “too-rushed-to-breathe” world.
We all have the same 168 hours per week — a number few people contemplate even as they talk about “24-7” with abandon — but since time passes whether we acknowledge it or not, we seldom think through exactly how we’re spending our hours.
We also live in a competitive society, and so by lamenting our overwork and sleep deprivation — even if that requires workweek inflation and claiming our worst nights are typical — we show that we are dedicated to our jobs and our families. Being “busy” and “starved for time” is a way to show we matter. Put another way, it makes us feel important.
Jason of StrengthRunner cited it in his post about finding time to run and how most people make excuses about not having enough time when the reality is that we all have the same 24 hours — it’s all about priorities.
Time is a non-renewable resource that must be treated as the most valuable currency available. You can always make more money – but you’ll never “make” more time. Once an afternoon of watching a rerun of that old movie (that you’ve already seen) is gone you can’t get it back.
I propose that we strike the phrase “make time” from our vocabulary and never use it again. Using it gives us a false sense that time can actually be created when it actually can just be used differently. We can find more time by eliminating distractions but we can never make more of it.
I remember before I started adding running to my weekly routine, I always believed I wouldn’t have time for it. But since then, I’ve read numerous articles of runners who seem to have more time (and energy) because they run! It turns out there are many mothers and fathers out there with demanding full time jobs, a household of pets (multiple cats, dogs) and children (three or four kids or more) and aging parents they care for AND a house and backyard that they tend to (and some even volunteer in their community) while running daily and partaking in races, triathlons and even ironmans! And while it is true that there are days when I couldn’t fit in a run (because I slept late and didn’t get up in time or just felt downright too tired and lazy), I knew that I had the time for it. All it takes is 20-30 mins but I know I did other things instead (surf the web, watch some tv, veg on the sofa with a bag of chips or a cup of ice cream or read a magazine or stay in the office way later than I should have) so I can’t complain about not having that 30 minutes — it’s just what I chose to prioritize instead.



