How To Properly Manage Your Time - Oliver Burkeman | Modern Wisdom Podcast 365

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024

Комментарии • 42

  • @ChrisWillx
    @ChrisWillx  3 года назад +8

    Yes squad. Here’s the timestamps:
    00:00 Intro
    00:29 Unique Challenges of Time
    09:34 The Dangers of Over-productivity
    19:24 Solving the Efficiency Trap
    26:18 What to Say ‘No’ To
    38:07 Letting Go of To-Do List Anxiety
    46:39 Forsaking Present for Future
    56:03 Productivity as Denial of Mortality
    1:01:33 Seeing Life as a Gift

  • @onlyonestarwarsfan5337
    @onlyonestarwarsfan5337 3 года назад +20

    For me, the best way to me to maximize my productivity is by training myself to “delete the idea of time.” I stop obsessing over the clock, stop telling myself “oh I have time” and/or “oh I can do that later, and instead just flow through the present knowing that I have something to do, and doing it. I’m still improving, but it’s been a fruitful mental exercise that’s turning into better habits.
    I hope that all made sense lol.

    • @johndoe4073
      @johndoe4073 3 года назад +1

      That is legit insightful. Thank you for sharing.

  • @threethrushes
    @threethrushes 3 года назад +4

    At 39 years old, I had achieved a middle-manager job in a large FTSE100 firm. My reward for 20 years of hard work, sacrifice, deferred pleasure, was a life of constant stress, and 60+ hours a week for money which I could never spend and a slave mentality.
    I exited, and today I'm self-employed, zero stress, and plenty of time for my hobbies, pet projects, and professional obligations.

  • @AmeliaBodilia
    @AmeliaBodilia Год назад +1

    Manage your priorities and you will optimize your time. The march of time waits for nothing or no one. Loved this conversation.

  • @c.chinaski3156
    @c.chinaski3156 3 года назад +6

    I love your interview style man
    I clock how you start saying something but put it off to a later part of the conversation in order to address what the other person has just said..
    You really do great @ really listening, observing & answering in response to your guests.
    Great shit bro 👌🏻

  • @jonnystoffel
    @jonnystoffel 3 года назад +6

    I’ve been in the process of stumbling into this realization in the last year. It’s better to willfully sacrifice something important than to let everything wither on the vine.

    • @ChrisWillx
      @ChrisWillx  3 года назад +2

      Great insight.

    • @threethrushes
      @threethrushes 3 года назад +1

      It's the concept of 'choose your sacrifice'.
      Every decision we make, every path we go down, we're sacrificing something - family, health, wealth, career, friends, hobbies, etc.
      Most people aren't conscious of these choices or sacrifices. Be conscious.

  • @anantsrivastava7702
    @anantsrivastava7702 3 года назад +2

    The perspective...man!!! Mind boggling!!

  • @peripheralparadox4218
    @peripheralparadox4218 3 года назад +5

    I disagree with the assertion that medieval farmers didn’t have a concept of time. A clock is just one way of measuring time. We have always measured time. We measure with the seasons, the movement of the sun, a memory.

    • @JEBavido
      @JEBavido 2 года назад

      Yeah, needing to get a crop in before it dampens and ruins so you don't starve before spring is a concept of time our generation has no clue about. Talk about time-crunch!!

  • @SamWill1999
    @SamWill1999 3 года назад +3

    This was very helpful and needed, thank you both.

  • @sj4267
    @sj4267 7 месяцев назад

    13:50 such a good point

  • @ericdraven3654
    @ericdraven3654 Год назад

    I loved the book and I have enjoyed the interview❤

  • @Romie15
    @Romie15 Год назад

    Great episode! ❤

  • @lokiwun
    @lokiwun 3 года назад +1

    Terrific conversation Chris. Bit frustrating. I wanted to join in every five minutes; and was waiting for you to talk about boundary setting and deferment of gratification, which you inched towards, but didn't quite make it. The remark at the end about expanding or shrinking. Hells bells that resonated with me. 🙏👏👍

  • @rebecca7410
    @rebecca7410 3 года назад +2

    Great podcast, and I love Burkeman's writing also. I lived in Asia from the age of 30-38, and didn't feel the same sense of needing to be 'doing'/be busy all the time or using my time 'effectively' like I feel back here in the UK. It's so strange, and I can't quite articulate it, but in Asia things felt less pressured and life felt less like a rat race, despite me working 50-60 hour weeks out there. I wonder why I feel more 'busy' or stressed generally in the UK, as I work less hours, plus I don't watch TV, Netflix etc, nor have any social media (apart from podcasts on RUclips and reading Reddit), so I'm less exposed to cultural messages etc., but I certainly 'feel' different back here.

    • @ChrisWillx
      @ChrisWillx  3 года назад

      Oliver is very legit. Glad you enjoyed!

    • @rustinholliday2252
      @rustinholliday2252 2 года назад +3

      The reason you feel stressed back in the UK is because you are fundamentally a product of your environment, Asia as you said is laid back throughout so you cannot help to be in sync with that environment. The UK on the other hand (I'm from Liverpool) is wall to wall traffic, with everybody running around trying to cram good times into the precious moments of their dwindling lives. Brits are more your Hedonist, Capitalist, devoid of religion or philosophical practices type. Obviously I'm generalising massively for effect but you catch my drift.

  • @MrRocksW
    @MrRocksW 2 года назад +1

    My issue is that we are always competing with other people. Im a young software developer which is fiercely competitive. If I don't study all the time I become uncompetitive and get overtaken by my peers.

  • @samuelvilz
    @samuelvilz 3 года назад +2

    Episode #365 is about time. Nice one

    • @ChrisWillx
      @ChrisWillx  3 года назад +2

      Totally didn’t realise that. Great spot

  • @JEBavido
    @JEBavido 2 года назад

    As an artist who's trying to improve, I have to do things in increments of time or each thing could go on forever to the detriment of other aspects of my skills. Study and practice tonal management in a painting? That could go on for years. Study and practice drawing the human figure? Ditto.
    I love your thoughts on denial of death. And if we don't deny death, then I think we each struggle with wanting to leave a mark or wanting to be remembered when we're gone.

  • @Druids234
    @Druids234 3 года назад

    Some activities give us a sense of doing what is needed and thus doing enough at a particular time, like having brought in the harvest, or fulfilled a need, or addressed a danger, at which point one can relax with a sense of something completed.
    This can also be seen as a matter of what layer of your worth as a person you're trying to address (Burkeman comes close to talking about this). If you remain at the level of entitlement worth, chasing the attention, consideration, approval, and support of others, and seeing yourself in that light, then no amount of productivity can ever be enough, because those are infinite needs and can never be satisfied.
    If, however, you manage to go a level deeper, to greater-value worth, where you are acting in the service of a good beyond yourself, then one of the characteristics of experiences at that level is that when you have done what is needed on a particular occasion, then you will feel you've done enough. So if as a poet, let's say, I feel I need to express something - get it down on paper - then once I've done that, I feel that on that occasion I've done something enriching and worthwhile, enough for that moment. The challenge is to find the domain of greater value that will speak to you in your own life. Some find this in religion, but there are many others places it can also be found.
    Timothy Corwen (author, The Worth of a Person)

  • @Wingedmagician
    @Wingedmagician 3 года назад

    One of my favorites on the podcast. Listened on my pod-catcher but wanted to leave this comment. Good stuff.

  • @AberrantArt
    @AberrantArt 3 года назад +1

    That was DEPRESSING AF. Makes me think there's no hope, no control, and no point.

  • @scorpy6331
    @scorpy6331 3 года назад +1

    Extremely educational,,,thanks!

  • @williamhart1396
    @williamhart1396 3 года назад +1

    I needed this. Thank you

    • @ChrisWillx
      @ChrisWillx  3 года назад +1

      Such a sick episode, I really enjoyed this one

  • @Teasehirt
    @Teasehirt 3 года назад

    If I can imagine it, I can do it !!

  • @sj4267
    @sj4267 7 месяцев назад

    32:20 🔥

  • @JEBavido
    @JEBavido 2 года назад +1

    "Morons all the way up." LOL! I remember telling my kids this when I realized that people in big businesses, global finance, and even running whole governments, are each just flying by the seat of their pants.

  • @jimluebke3869
    @jimluebke3869 3 года назад

    "The reward for getting into the best universities and getting the best job"
    Is the ability to fulfill noblesse oblige.

  • @metalninja2474
    @metalninja2474 3 года назад

    34:00 puts paid to the phrase "jack of all trades, master of none". It seems the former is celebrated or encouraged more than the latter, at least from my perspective.

  • @Emma-dt5tg
    @Emma-dt5tg 3 года назад +1

    Pretty sure peasants knew they had to get the harvest in by a certain time

  • @Mr.Quantum
    @Mr.Quantum 3 года назад +1

    We need videos on how to recognize fascism

  • @Steve2Work
    @Steve2Work 3 года назад

    Comment, Images, and latest edited version here:
    facebook.com/Steven.Work/posts/10227160742748717
    No Facebook?, original version found under here:
    Alt: ruclips.net/user/Steve2Workdiscussion
    * Sort by Newest *
    www.minds.com/newsfeed/1280662643975131139
    gab.com/StevWork/posts/106870201149352001
    Index Number 1126: