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Subject: ARE YOU HAVING A BUSY SCHEDULE? READ THIS TO KNOW

  *The cult of busy : Scott Berkun

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When I was younger I thought busy people were more important than everyone
else. Otherwise why would they be so busy? I had busy bosses, busy parents,
and always I just thought they must have really important things to do. It
seemed an easy way to see who mattered and who didn’t. The busy must matter
more, and the lazy mattered less.******

This is the cult of busy. That simply by always seeming to have something to
do, we all assume you must be important or successful.****

It explains the behavior of many people at work. By appearing busy, people
bother them less, and  simultaneously believe they’re doing well at their
job. It’s quite a trick.****

I now believe the opposite to be true. Or the near opposite. Here’s why:****

• Time is the singular measure of life. It’s one of the few things you can
not get more of. Knowing how to spend it well is possibly the most important
skill you can have. ****

• The person who gets a job done in one hour will seem less busy than the
guy who can only do it in five.  How busy a person seems is not necessarily
indicative of the quality of their results. Someone who is better at
something might very well seem less busy, because they are more effective.
Results matter more than the time spent to achieve them. ****

• Being in demand can have good and bad causes.  Someone with a line of
people waiting to talk to them outside their office door at work seems busy,
and therefore seems important. But somehow the clerk running the slowest
supermarket checkout line in the universe isn’t praised in the same way, it
means they’re ineffective. People who are at the center of everything aren’t
necessarily good at what they do (although they might be). The bar of being
busy falls far well below the bar of being good. ****

• The compulsion to save time may lead nowhere. If you’re always cutting
corners to save time, when exactly are you using the time you’ve saved?
There is this illusion some day in the future you get back all the time
you’ve squirreled away in one big chunk. I don’t think time works this way.
For most Americans it seems most of our time savings goes straight into
watching television. That’s where all the time savings we think we get
actually goes. ****

• The phrase “I don’t have time for” should never be said. We all get the
same amount of time every day. If you can’t do something it’s not about the
quantity of time. It’s really about how important the task is to you. I’m
sure if you were having a heart attack, you’d magically find time to go to
the hospital. That time would come from something else you’d planned to do,
but now seems less important. This is how time works all the time. What
people really mean when they say “I don’t have time” is this thing is not
important enough to earn my time. It’s a polite way to tell people they’re
not worth your time. ****

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This means people who are always busy are time poor. They have a time
shortage. They have time debt. They are either trying to do too much, or
they aren’t doing what they’re doing very well. They are failing to either
a) be effective with their time b) don’t know what they’re trying to effect,
so they scramble away at trying to optimize for  everything, which leads to
optimizing nothing.****

On the other hand, people who truly have control over time have some in
their pocket to give to someone in need. They have a sense of priorities
that drives their use of time and can shift away from the specific ordinary
work that’s easy to justify, in favor of the more ethereal, deeper things
that are harder to justify. They protect their time from trivia and idiocy.
These people are time rich. They provide themselves with a surplus of time.
They might seem to idle, or to relax, more often then the rest, but that may
be a sign of their mastery not their incompetence.****

I deliberately try not to fill my calendar. I choose not to say Yes to
everything. For to do so would make me too busy, and I think, less effective
at what my goals are.  I always want to have some margin of my time in
reserve, time I’m free to spend in any way I choose, including doing almost
nothing at all. I’m free to take detours. I’m open to serendipity. Some of
the best thinkers throughout history had some of their best thoughts
while  going
for walks, playing cards with friends, little things things that generally
would not be considered the hallmarks of busy people. It’s the ability to
pause, to reflect, and relax, to let the mind wander, that’s perhaps the
true sign of time mastery, for when the mind returns it’s often sharper and
more efficient, but most important perhaps, happier than it was before.****



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