The Fallacy of Time Management (Oliver Burkeman)

Published: Sept. 1, 2022, 7:01 a.m.

\u201cThere seems to be this basic idea that if you make a system including a human life, more efficient, capable of processing, more inputs to put it in like abstract general terms. Well, if that supply of inputs is infinite, all that's gonna happen is that you attract more of them into the system and you end up busier, right? This is Parkinson's law.. It's induced demand with the way when they widen freeways to ease the congestion, it makes the route more appealing to more drivers. So more cars come and fill the lane and then the congestion gets back to what it was before. There's all these different ways in which trying to get on top of something that you can't actually get on top of is futile. And technology seems to offer us that promise, and of course it does help us do lots and lots of really useful things, but it doesn't help us get to the state of peace of mind with respect to our limited natures. It's never going to break through that, that barrier,\u201d so says Oliver Burkeman, feature writer for The Guardian and the New York Times bestselling author of Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals, a book which delivers practical self-help through the lens of philosophical reflection as Burkeman questions the modern fixation on \u201cgetting everything done.\u201d\xa0\nWe are finite, material creatures who only live so long\u2014about four thousand weeks\u2014Burkeman tells us, yet we are obsessed with cramming more and more \u201cstuff\u201d into our days, aided by time saving technologies that give us the illusion of transcending the ultimate limitation: Our own mortality. Our culture has led us to believe that if we just became more efficient, we could optimize our lives enough to bring about greater happiness. But in an era where busyness has become a virtue, our attempts to drive efficiency ultimately don\u2019t yield more time for the meaningful stuff, but rather heighten our sense of anxious hurry as we face, and are expected to process, an incessant stream of inputs.\nWe can only begin to build toward a meaningful life when we embrace our finitude, he advises us. Rather than searching out shortcuts to arrive at our cosmically significant life purpose faster, Burkeman tells us to ride the metaphorical bus\u2014allowing ourselves to learn and develop at all the stops along the way. The universe is not depending on us to maximize our time, he says, and when we fall victim to the siren\u2019s call of efficiency culture to avoid the annoying parts of life, we miss out on a whole bunch of the meaningful stuff, too.\xa0\n\nEPISODE HIGHLIGHTS:\n\nWhy we shouldn\u2019t maximize efficiency\u20265:18\n\nInstrumentalizing time\u202615:42\n\nOriginality lies on the far side of unoriginality\u202631:41\n\nOur universal insignificance\u202640:11\n\n\nMORE FROM OLIVER BURKEMAN:\nFour Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals\nThe Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can't Stand Positive Thinking\nExplore Oliver's Website\n \nTo learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy\n \n Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices