If there's anything life has taught me recently, it’s that time doesn’t care about excuses. It doesn’t care if you’re tired, broke, unmotivated, or “just resting your eyes” for five more minutes. It just keeps moving tick by tick, minute by minute, hour by hour.
And if I’m being completely honest with myself (and with you), I haven’t always respected time the way I should.
There was a time when I was the chief procrastinator. I could push a task for days, telling myself, “I still have time,” or “I’ll do it later.” My comfort zone became my best friend scrolling endlessly through my phone, watching skits, laughing at memes, convincing myself I needed to relax before getting serious. But guess what? That “relaxation” often stretched into half the day, and before I knew it, the sun had set, and I had nothing to show for it.
But life has a way of knocking some sense into you.
I started noticing that my days felt short not because 24 hours weren’t enough, but because I was simply wasting them. I’d stay up late doing nothing important, then wake up late and feel like the day was already over. It wasn’t that time was against me, it was that I wasn’t on time’s side.
So I decided to make a change. Nothing dramatic, just small shifts.
Now, I try to plan my day the night before. I write down 3 to 5 things I must get done the next day, nothing too long or complicated, just clear priorities. And once I wake up, I start checking them off one after the other. I’ve realized that even if I don’t complete everything, just trying to stay accountable keeps me focused.
Do I still get distracted? Of course. I’m human. But I’ve learned how to catch myself and return to my tasks. I’ve also stopped waiting for the “perfect mood” to begin something. I’ve found out that starting even when I don’t feel like it is the only way to beat procrastination.
Now to answer the big question: Is 24 hours enough? If used well, yes. But if wasted, even 72 hours wouldn’t be enough. Once I’m done with my major tasks for the day, I reward myself with something light maybe watch a series episode, go for a walk, or read something motivational. That way, I feel balanced.
As for what I now consider a waste of time? Mindless scrolling. Comparing myself to others. Overthinking. Worrying about things I can’t control. These things drain energy without adding value.
I won’t say I’ve become a time management guru overnight, but I’m definitely not the same person who used to waste hours and justify it with weak excuses. Growth for me has meant becoming more intentional, understanding that my future depends on what I do with now.
So yes, I’m learning to respect time not fear it, not run from it, but work with it. Because the truth is, time doesn’t wait. But it does reward those who use it well.
Images are Ai generated
@powerpaul/engdeu-simple-as-that-stand-out-heres-why-and-how