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Do You Really Want Time to Go Faster?

What is clutter costing you?

Not too long ago, I was messaging with a friend, catching up on our days. I told him that I got a lot of work done that day, had worked out, and that I was getting ready to head off to meet with a client. His response was, “Nice! You are so busy. The day goes faster like that.”


Hold up. Wait….What was that?!


His statement gave me an immediate visceral response that shot an unusual and unexpected feeling from head to toe. It was as if some sort of alarm went off and I was suddenly fully alert. I immediately thought, “Wait a minute here, I don’t want time to go fast!”


This full-body response to such a benign comment caught me off guard, so I played around with it a bit. Why was my reaction so immediate? Was I feeling defensive? What was being triggered? Why such a strong feeling?


Then I realized what it was…


It was less about not wanting time to pass quickly than it was about not wanting it to pass slowly – the slowness caused by distress


My friend’s comment had momentarily transported me back to my days as a financial analyst more than a decade before. Specifically, to the last position I was in before I left the corporate world. Back then, I dreaded the thought of returning to work on Monday, and this sense of dread began at 4:30pm on Friday afternoon, not on Sunday night!


Those last few months of my corporate days were the height of a terrible period in my career and in my life when my work days dragged…by…so…slowly. I wished instead that they would go so fast…and seemingly not exist. I was wishing to get to something else, anything else, in the future, but was not thriving in the present. Wishing my life away.


I understand I needed to go through that experience in order to get to where I am now, but I wasn’t necessarily aware of that at the time. Sometimes it has to get sooo unbearable that we can’t take it any longer before we take action to change things. That’s what happened to me.


So I took a leave from my job and spent a couple months doing some deep work. With that time, I created a plan for the next chapter of my career and I began the journey to completely transform my life, my perspective, and so much more. I quit that corporate job and am now in a place where I’m a happy active participant in the present moment and I’m not wishing time away so I can get to that future, undefined moment.


Sure, there are times when I wish that an hour or two would speed up a tad, but that’s generally because I’m hungry or tired and want time to get to a place where I can eat or rest. Now I might wish a particular project or task would go faster, but not TIME. I’m focused on enjoying the moment that I’m in, not wishing to get to the next moment.


How about you? Do you ever wish for time to go faster? When? 


How often? What are you doing when you are feeling like that? 


What else has been going on in your life when you’ve had this experience?


Is there something that you’re delaying taking action on that’s driving the feeling?


Sometimes when we get a few years into our thirties and beyond, time can feel like it's speeding up. This may be related to our having passed some significant milestones by then, such as getting married, having kids, graduating or buying a house. With these milestones behind us, we may feel that some of life’s novelty has dissipated and that the excitement has leveled or tapered off. Or maybe we realize we’ve veered off our original course and have become stuck in an unsatisfactory job or an unintentionally cultivated mundane routine.


So, what do you do if you find yourself dissatisfied by living a life that isn’t exactly what you expected it would be? What do you do if you find your life has pieces that you didn’t sign up for and are dissatisfied with, but have gotten anyway? What do you do if you’re wishing for time to go faster during certain parts and you’re savoring every minute of other parts?


Do you really want time to go faster? Are you wishing your life away? Is that really what will make things better? When singer/songwriter/actor David Cassidy passed away, his daughter published her father’s final words: “So much wasted time.” That really resonates here. Not that we’re ever going to love every moment, of course not. But delaying taking action until we can’t take it any longer feels like wasting time.


What if instead of wishing your time would go faster or slower, you worked toward present moment awareness. Living where you are instead of where you might be, yes, even during stressful phases.


I’ve heard from so many – too many – people things like “That’s just the way it is.” Or, “It’s work. I’m not supposed to like it.” Or the ultra cynical, “Life’s a bitch and then you die.” With that kind of mindset, who wouldn’t be wishing for time to go faster?!


Does any of this resonate with you? There’s got to be a better way. Right?


To anyone who finds themselves wishing for time to go faster on a regular basis, I’d like to challenge you to stop accepting things as they are and start questioning


I challenge you to explore the situations where you find yourself wanting time to go faster and to look at how you might be able to turn that around so you can find more joy and satisfaction in your life. Yes, even during those stressful times.


Now I’m certainly not suggesting that you do anything drastic like quit your job. I’m sure that you have bills to pay and a change that major would take a bit of strategic planning. But is there a different perspective that you can adopt when it comes to your job? Can you find a deeper sense of purpose in what you’re doing so you can stop wishing the days away?


Questions to explore…


What if you explored your job from a different perspective? I know of one person who shifted her dissatisfied view of the bureaucracy of her office by instead focusing on the wellbeing of its clients. What if you took a sabbatical or even a couple weeks away from the job to reflect and refresh.


What if you reduced your expenses so you could reduce your income? Could you downsize your home or possessions? Or, what if you established some short-term goals, such as paying off debt, to ultimately enable you to earn less. (Be wary of a plan that includes making large purchases or taking expensive vacations in the future as a reward for having to work a job that causes you to suffer and feel unfulfilled. The fun of that purchase or vacation won’t be able to balance the rest of your life.)


What if you created a new energy outside of your job? Things like taking classes – dance, ceramics, or maybe even towards a degree. Or volunteering or exercising? 


Whatever you do, do it in the now. Be in the present moment. No more wishing time would speed by or fearing that it will pass too slowly. This is your life and you deserve to enjoy it – even the challenging parts. There’s seriously no better time than the present to take action.


Enjoy the journey,

Julie

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