I have finally stopped fighting time. Not age, exactly, I think the hope in a jar will be around for some time yet. But I am tired of manipulating time. Trying to fit all the things into a tiny space and being surprised when it leaks.
Time does not bend in the ways I want it to. Things take a certain amount of time and they do not contract just because my time frame is short. And yet I try to push everything into small pockets of time and when those pockets explode at the seams they make me feel rushed and stressed. Confused as to why I couldn’t make it work. Busy. Busy. Busy.
Time is finite. In so many ways more valuable then money. Yet we manage it differently from money. We don’t value it in the same way – our own or other people’s. I would never ask a $100 from a friend. If I had to, I would be embarrassed and awkward. I’d promise it back within days. I’d feel terrible. Yet I ask and am asked to give my time away regularly. And I do both without much thought or complaint. The Dalai Lama’s famous quote about what surprises him most about humanity is telling:
“Man. Because he sacrifices his health in order to make money. Then he sacrifices money to recuperate his health. And then he is so anxious about the future that he does not enjoy the present; the result being that he does not live in the present or the future; he lives as if he is never going to die, and then dies having never really lived.”
I don’t believe that money and time can be directly equated to each other. Our perception of money and time are too different. By being caught up in the finite nature of time, we can become stressed – vowing to wring value out of every second. Then by doing so we miss the beautifully slow times that are vital for creativity and nourishment. The newborn days of my babies were my absolute favourites. I know that many people don’t feel that way. But the sleepy, other-worldliness of it all, the long stretching hours of nothing and everything were so wonderful to me. I may have donned the rose-coloured glasses of retrospect.
So I don’t think we should necessarily chase time, striving to make it all count or be miserly with spending it. I don’t think that leads to a life well-lived.
However some of the attitudes we apply to money, should equally apply to time. Valuing it for one thing. Respecting each other’s.
Other things too. I feel comfortable with a buffer of funds. We are careful with our money and cashflow. Yet my time is spent hand to mouth, none of it saved or reserved. I know I should be creating white space, but I have tendency to fill every second, every cranny. Without a great deal of thought or respect for time itself.
I have far-off dreams that I’d like realised. That book I keep talking about for one. A few other projects. Dreaming won’t do it. Time is the only currency we have to spend in order to get things done. In that way, I know I should budget it towards the things I want to achieve. Yet there is always something more immediate tugging at my attention. I would save money towards a holiday or an expensive treat. Yet I don’t budget my time in the same way.
When I look back on my fondest memories, they aren’t of using time in a particularly valuable way in a monetary sense. Yet they are the things I treasure most. The aforementioned time with my boys as newborns. Lazy family days on the beach. Travelling as a young adult. Stretches of time lost in creative pursuit, writing or sewing. Long and interesting conversations with intelligent and challenging people. They are not the things that fill a to do list, but they are balm to soul.
I’m going to be calmer about time. About letting it go and not over-stuffing it. Just seeing five minutes as five minutes rather than a chance to get three things done. That over-stuffing leads to over-spill and I’m suddenly late to meet a friend. And in doing so, I have not shown her time respect or value.
So I have decided to be more realistic of both my time, and others. As pragmatic about it as I am the funds in my bank account.
What is your attitude towards time?
Is it similar to how you manage money?
Love this, Robyna. Time is so precious and so fleeting.
It really is. Trying to treat it that way.
I never looked at time like this but I am always trying to fit little things into areas that should remain empty. I am up early, bed late and then wonder why on Friday night I am knackered. Love your idea.
Natalie McNamara recently posted…15 ways to improve your mental health
I find I can only do one or the other (up late or up early) and I am more creative in the mornings, so I set that time aside.
You’re so right, time is so precious and probably our most valuable resource. We should use it wisely. I saw something the other day about a time budget, where people planned their time a bit like they plan their money, and there was always a “buffer.”
Sammie @ The Annoyed Thyroid recently posted…Taking Stock – April
I LOVE the idea of a time budget.
You’ve certainly made me rethink how I view and utilise time! It’s definitely different to how I view and utilise money. I always think things will take less time than they do so then I’m always stressed trying to finish off what I set myself to do.
And yes, I loved my time with my newborn babies too!
Ingrid
http://www.fabulousandfunlife.blogspot.com.au
Ingrid @ Fabulous and Fun Life recently posted…Top 10 Mother’s Day Gift Suggestions
I underestimate as well – such a difficult thing to get right.
My time is super valueable, I always make time for doing nothing and not have every corner of every minute filled. I like to just be, reflect and dream. Most things are replaceable but not time, it’s the one thing you always want more of when push comes to shove.
I also loved those dreamy, foggy newborn days, surrendering to time and soaking in the expriences.
That’s where the magic is, I think. Ah those foggy days – so beautiful.
Time is exactly why I’ve stepped back from one blog to work on a book. I can’t do both. Well, I could, but I’d be miserable, so that doesn’t count!
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I must admit I am thinking about the same thing. Cannot. Let. Go.
I too love the way time slows when babies are newborns and that time passes far too quickly.
It’s just divine – I hope you are enjoying every moment.
That’s an interesting perspective. I’d never thought of time in the same terms as money. I guess I probably treat them both the same. However I’m terrible with money too so that’s not really a good thing!
Tegan recently posted…The importance of teachers + giveaway
Ha ha. I find it helps me just put a little more value on my time and other people’s.
Love this read, Robyna. I have a real problem with time. I’m constantly clock watching and making sure we get here by a certain time and do that by another. I’d like to be a little freer with my time. I guess we all would.
Renee Wilson recently posted…How to Make a Fun Family Movie Night with Sing
Oh me too. And then that terrible habit of thinking “well, we have 10 minutes, that means I can check all my emails, put on a load of washing and clean the kitchen” 😉
That is a lovely quote! And so true! I’m finding if I don’t schedule time or reserve time for things I’ll never get them done, so I set myself a few tasks a day (aside from helping with the boys). Sometimes it will be things I’ve allocated a naptime for, sometimes it will just be a big list of things to do whenever there is time. I’m always more productive with my time if I’ve allocated it out in advance to something though.
Micaa recently posted…Shorts, Navy Prints and Rebecca Minkoff Quilted Love Bag
Oh yes! That’s why I love bullet journalling – there’s the list there and ready to go.
Brilliant post Robyna. I love your concept of budgeting time and that quote from the Dalai Lama. Over the past few years, I’ve become better with how I handle or spend my time, but the guilty feelings, the rushing and the stress can so easily sneak back up. These days, I no longer say yes or accept all invitations I receive as I know I need to try to include some downtime in my family’s schedule.
Erika @ Ever-changing Life of a Mum recently posted…How to use essential oils around the home
This year I have been saying “I’ll get back to you” and then carefully considering my answer before just leaping to a yes. It’s made a big difference.
A fantastic post Robyna, and a topic that I’ve been a lot more mindful of late. Being someone that I always on the go, I’ve recently started to plan time to just chill and did heaps of it over the recent long weekend. It felt really strange at first, having nothing planned & time to do what I wanted. Relating time to money is a brilliant way of making us all stop and think about how important our time should be to us.
Jenni @unclutter my world recently posted…SEASONAL WARDROBE UNCLUTTER
It is hard isn’t it? I always find myself reaching for “doing” but sometimes “being” is where creative spark begins.
I’m pretty ferocious about protecting my free time. I revel in it, rather than trying to squeeze a lot of results from it. If I don’t have big blocks of time allocated to doing homey things, or very little, I actually begin to feel quite anxious and unsettled.
I’ve never cared about being seen as busy/productive. All I usually see when I glance in the window of such creatures is hurried, stressed and not any better off.
Overscheduled living isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.
Annette recently posted…10 Things I Love About Autumn
Oh my goodness – it really isn’t. I actually think being busy and being productive can be quite different things.
I loooove this post! It’s something that I’ve been thinking about a lot and you’ve expressed it beautifully. And I too loved those slow newborn days. Now that the girls are older I definitely wish I’d taken more time to really enjoy it.
#teamIBOT
Kylie Purtell recently posted…School Holidays {the most wonderful time of the year} | Life
I think we probably did enjoy those moments – might have been too tired to remember them.
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