Managing Energy, Not Time
Just about everyone is in a hurry these days, juggling work, family, and play like so many balls in the air. We pride ourselves on our ability to multitask. We use e-mail, cell phones, and other devices to keep in touch so we don’t miss anything. About the only thing that seems to be slowing us down is traffic, and then we use that time to catch up on phone calls and messages.
However, the more timesaving devices we have at our disposal, the more time we have to cram in extra tasks, more contacts, and more meetings. Instead of saving time, we are creating more possibilities. We are wired up but melting down. We assume that if only we had more time, we could accomplish more and be more satisfied.
We survive on too little sleep, grab a bite here and there without taking time to enjoy a meal in good company, fuel up on coffee, chill out on alcohol, and throw medications at symptoms of stress. Faced with relentless demands at work, we return home exhausted, only to face children and spouses with less than a cheerful disposition. Instead of experiencing our families as a source of joy and renewal, we see them as one more demand in an overburdened life.
We say that we are starved for time. Even if we manage our time more efficiently, there is still never enough of it in a 24-hour day. We cut back on sleep, skip meals and exercise, cut down on meetings, but the schedule just gets filled up again. That’s because time isn’t really the key issue in the first place.
Energy is the Key
The issue isn’t time—or time management. It’s energy. And this requires us to rethink much of what we’ve believed about organizing our lives. Managing time efficiently is no guarantee that we’ll bring sufficient energy to whatever it is we’re doing. We need to learn two new rules:


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