[image: time management]

   - Can Happiness Be Created with Proper Time Management?

BY FRANCIS WADE <http://www.lifehack.org/articles/author/fwade> IN
PRODUCTIVITY <http://www.lifehack.org/productivity>


If Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi and Matt Killingsworth  are right, we should be
paying far more attention to how we spend our time than to the stuff we
accumulate. They argue that it’s not the activity we choose to do that’s
important to our happiness: that turns out to have little to no effect on
our state of mind.

Instead, it has everything to do with the quality of our mental focus in
the moment.

Both of these researchers are students of human happiness, and have come to
similar conclusions from different directions: Killingsworth’s work has
uncovered the fact that we are substantially less happy when we indulge in
mind-wandering. The activity we are engaged in almost doesn’t matter. Being
on vacatuib ub Hanauca isn’t an opportunity to mind-wander—that only makes
us unhappy. The same applies to a boring meeting that’s going nowhere.

Csikszentmihalyi discovered a similar result: that we are happiest (and
most productive) when we are able to enter the flow state—an ecstatic
experience of total concentration that requires our complete attention due
to its difficulty. He found that this is more likely to happen when we are
at the office: we often derive more enjoyment from work than from time off,
due to the fact that we feel “skillful, and challenged, and therefore feel
more happy, strong, creative and satisfied.” It’s not because work is
inherently better, but it is well-structured.

It appears that we are confused about what real happiness is and what it
looks like from one moment to the next. We tell ourselves that we’ll be
happy when we win the lottery, not understanding that after the money is in
the bank, we’ll be just as unhappy as before if we allow our minds to
wander.

Instead, we need to be careful about how we manage our time. It’s not a bad
idea to set up our days, whether we are at work, holiday or vacation, to
move from one flow opportunity to another. Or, in other words, we should
use time management methods to limit the amount of time we spend
mind-wandering.

Unfortunately, there are many who act in the opposite fashion, and don’t
plan their days at all. They suffer in situations like long commutes with
the habit of allowing free, unhappy mind-wandering. Their days are
sometimes spent bouncing from one interruption to another, fighting fires,
and never able to enter the flow state.

According to research conducted at King’s College in London workers
distracted by phone calls, emails and text messages suffer a greater loss
of IQ than a person smoking marijuana.

Others make open-ended lists of items that can’t be accomplished within
several days, and feel burdened whenever they have to confront these lists
to find the next item to work on.

How To Enter the Flow State

The best approach seems to combine daily foresight, continuous improvement,
and a high level of awareness.

We aren’t born with a natural ability to achieve flow, and to avoid
mind-wandering. Instead, productivity and happiness need to be fabricated
each day, which means working with our calendar to carve out blocks of time
in which we intend to enter the flow state.

These blocks of time won’t be created on their own on a regular basis, so
we have to learn how to improve the habits, practices and rituals that make
up our time management systems: this is the only way to produce these
opportunities reliably, even as we overcome obstacles such as the noise and
visual distractions that make rooms stuffed with cubicles such unproductive
environments.

A high level of awareness is important so that when we are in the flow
state, we know it. With self-awareness, we can interact with the world to
sustain it, as we ignore the ringing of phones or the alerts from tablets
because we are “Flowing.”

These skills (daily foresight, continuous improvement and high awareness)
aren’t only for the office. They also apply to leisure activities such as
talking with your spouse, playing with your kids, engaging in a hobby or
worshipping in temple. Entering the flow state in these activities can be
an intentional act that is planned beforehand, and perfected in the moment.

People with good time management skills can get into these states as often
as they want. They aren’t distracted by all the other stuff they could be
doing, as they know its all being properly managed. This takes practice if
it’s to be implemented at work or at play, but in the end, it could give us
exactly what Csikszentmihalyi and Killingsworth predicted in their
research: more happiness.

Featured photo credit:  Vintage pocket watch and hour
glass<http://www.shutterstock.com/cat.mhtml?lang=en&search_source=search_form&version=llv1&anyorall=all&safesearch=1&searchterm=watch&search_group=&orient=&search_cat=&searchtermx=&photographer_name=&people_gender=&people_age=&people_ethnicity=&people_number=&commercial_ok=&color=&show_color_wheel=1#id=79111546&src=12d0092759ff88045174ecf79b214584-1-2>
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