When was the last time you heard someone say that they didn't have time to do something that they really wanted to do? (What exactly does that mean anyway - "not enough time"?)
If we don't have enough time to do what truly matters to us - what we deem as important - then what do we have time for?
Our lives are filled with multiple choices. There are literally hundreds, if not thousands, of things we could do with our time every day. This, although nice, has really created some big issues for people. A new dilemma in our developed world today is: how do I choose the best use of my time and energy? What criteria do I use to help me determine how I use my time and energy?
I don't know if it really matters to most people. We know how to manage our time. Just pick up a book on time management, and it will be full of all kinds of ideas. We have palm pilots. Daily planners. Computer software. Post-It Notes. All tools designed to help us more effectively manage this thing called time. Yet we still complain that we just don't have time for anything. To me, this indicates that the real issue has nothing to do with TIME, but with what we deem as important and our courage to step forward and live it through time.
What are we doing with our time? As a resource, are we making the best use of it? Has "I just don't have time," become the excuse for mediocrity or stressful living that is easily embraced?
It always amazes me - and I fall prey to this myself - how much time people have to gripe and complain about what's wrong with their lives (is that what is most important to them), but not the time to do anything about CREATING their life the way they want it to be. Interesting, for sure.
In our personal lives I see the ramifications of "not having enough time." We fill our lives with many non-essentials. Things that truly don't fulfill us or edify our lives... Just consider for a moment how many things you - or someone you know - are doing that really don't uplift you? Or inspire you? Or that you even care about?
And on a much bigger picture - a global picture - we are actually faced with the same question. Do we have the time - will we take the time - to step forward and create a more harmonious world that allows for the emergence, the unfolding, of human potential? What IS most important to us collectively as a people on this big blue orb?
I don't know. Maybe that doesn't really matter to most people. And that would make sense. For how can the bigger picture matter when we don't have time for the smaller picture? How can we create a better world for all of us collectively if we can't do that for ourselves individually?
Maybe someday, we'll be sitting around seeing our individual lives coming to a close and still saying, "I just didn't have the time to..." And maybe someday, we'll be sitting around seeing our world come to a close and still saying, "We just didn't have the time to..." And maybe time is running out for us to step forward and decide on what truly matters to us - individually and collectively.
And I can't help but wonder, does this really matter to most people anyway?
If we don't have enough time to do what truly matters to us - what we deem as important - then what do we have time for?
Our lives are filled with multiple choices. There are literally hundreds, if not thousands, of things we could do with our time every day. This, although nice, has really created some big issues for people. A new dilemma in our developed world today is: how do I choose the best use of my time and energy? What criteria do I use to help me determine how I use my time and energy?
I don't know if it really matters to most people. We know how to manage our time. Just pick up a book on time management, and it will be full of all kinds of ideas. We have palm pilots. Daily planners. Computer software. Post-It Notes. All tools designed to help us more effectively manage this thing called time. Yet we still complain that we just don't have time for anything. To me, this indicates that the real issue has nothing to do with TIME, but with what we deem as important and our courage to step forward and live it through time.
What are we doing with our time? As a resource, are we making the best use of it? Has "I just don't have time," become the excuse for mediocrity or stressful living that is easily embraced?
It always amazes me - and I fall prey to this myself - how much time people have to gripe and complain about what's wrong with their lives (is that what is most important to them), but not the time to do anything about CREATING their life the way they want it to be. Interesting, for sure.
In our personal lives I see the ramifications of "not having enough time." We fill our lives with many non-essentials. Things that truly don't fulfill us or edify our lives... Just consider for a moment how many things you - or someone you know - are doing that really don't uplift you? Or inspire you? Or that you even care about?
And on a much bigger picture - a global picture - we are actually faced with the same question. Do we have the time - will we take the time - to step forward and create a more harmonious world that allows for the emergence, the unfolding, of human potential? What IS most important to us collectively as a people on this big blue orb?
I don't know. Maybe that doesn't really matter to most people. And that would make sense. For how can the bigger picture matter when we don't have time for the smaller picture? How can we create a better world for all of us collectively if we can't do that for ourselves individually?
Maybe someday, we'll be sitting around seeing our individual lives coming to a close and still saying, "I just didn't have the time to..." And maybe someday, we'll be sitting around seeing our world come to a close and still saying, "We just didn't have the time to..." And maybe time is running out for us to step forward and decide on what truly matters to us - individually and collectively.
And I can't help but wonder, does this really matter to most people anyway?