Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - How To Stop Feeling Overwhelmed with Oliver Burkeman (re-release) #536
Episode Date: March 16, 2025The average person has 4,000 weeks on earth. It doesn’t sound like much does it? You’re probably doing mental arithmetic right now trying to work out how many weeks you might have left. But if tha...t sounds like a pessimistic start to this podcast, fear not. My guest today is Oliver Burkeman, journalist and author, whose latest book is Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management For Mortals. And in this conversation, he shares a positive philosophy that can help us all overcome the overwhelm, make better choices, and build a meaningful relationship with time.  We begin by talking about our concept of time and how we falsely believe it’s something we can control. We think of time as infinite and don’t realise how distraction – that modern-day temptation – is robbing it from us. Or maybe we do know time is finite, says Oliver, but we just feel overwhelmed by all the things we have to do or want to do. How will we fit them all in? The truth, he points out, is that we won’t. Many of the productivity hacks that we learn are a delusion. Time management doesn’t mean becoming more productive, it means deciding what to neglect. And once we realise we can never fit everything in, we get the freedom to prioritise. Thinking about our limited lifespan may sound bleak, but Oliver is convinced that imposing limits of knowledge like this can help us live a more fulfilled and less stressed life. We’re more likely to use time mindfully, or be more creative, when we know it’s finite.  I absolutely loved talking with Oliver and I think his words will give you plenty to reflect on. In a world of demands, distractions and endless to-do lists, this conversation might be the most useful time-management tool of all. This conversation is full of mind-blowing facts and insights but it’s also really empowering and contains simple, practical tips that all of us can use to improve our lives. I hope you enjoy listening. Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. Try FREE for 7 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/feelbetterlivemore.  For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com.  Thanks to our sponsor: https://drinkag1.com/livemore  Show notes https://drchatterjee.com/536  DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or qualified healthcare provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What is definitely true about the amount of time that you'll get is that it will be finite rather than limitless.
We are finite creatures existing in this world of infinite inputs and opportunities.
So there's always going to be this mismatch.
Limited time means you have to make tough choices.
You have to not do things that would matter.
Hi, my name is Rangan Chastji.
Welcome to Feel Better, Live More.
The average person has about 4,000 weeks on planet Earth. Now that doesn't sound like
much does it? You're probably doing mental arithmetic right now trying to work out how
many weeks you may have left. But if that sounds like a pessimistic start to this podcast, fear not.
My guest today is Oliver Berkman, journalist and author whose latest book is
4,000 weeks time management for mortals.
And in this conversation, he shares a positive philosophy that can help us all
overcome the overwhelm, make better choices,
and build a meaningful relationship with time. We begin by talking about our concept of time and
how we falsely believe it's something that we can control. We often think of time as infinite
and don't realize how distraction that modern day temptation is robbing it from us. Or maybe we do know that time is finite says Oliver
But we just feel overwhelmed by all the things we have to do or want to do
So how do we go about fitting them all in?
The truth Oliver says is that we won't
Many of the productivity hats we learn are a delusion
Time management does not mean becoming more productive.
It means deciding what to neglect.
And once we realize we can never fit everything in,
we get the freedom to prioritize.
I understand that thinking about our limited lifespan
may sound bleak, but Oliver is convinced
that imposing limits like this
can help us
live a more fulfilled and less stressed life. We're more likely to use time
mindfully or be more creative when we know it's finite. I absolutely love
talking with Oliver and I'm pretty sure his words are going to give you plenty
to reflect on in your own life. In a world of demands, distractions and
endless to-do lists, listening
to this conversation might be the most useful time management tool of all. I hope you enjoy
listening.
And now, my conversation with Oliver Bergman. Your latest book, 4,000 Weeks, makes you think. My calculation based upon what you're writing
about is that I have around 1700 to 1800 weeks left on planet Earth. But then this morning
I also calculated it in terms of holidays. So I thought if I take one really nice holiday a year, then I potentially only
got 35 or 36 holidays left. What was your hope when you came up with this concept of
4,000 weeks? Is that something that you found to be scary for people or quite enlightening
and I guess liberating?
I mean, I think it is scary at first, right?
Especially that figure, which is a little bit less than the average human lifespan.
I blatantly chose 4,000 because it's a round number.
And of course, nobody knows they're going to get that much.
They might get significantly more, they might tragically get a lot less.
So it sort of illustrates it rather than any kind of fact.
What is definitely true about the amount of time that you'll get is that it will be finite
rather than limitless.
And that's really the, it sounds obvious, but I don't think we live properly in the
acknowledgement of what that really means.
So yeah, at first it's stressful because you're like, okay, either I'm going
to feel really despairing about this or I've got to really strenuously try to make the
most of every day in a way that actually is not very relaxing at all, but kind of awful.
What I'm trying to guide people towards is that once you sort of really truly accept
this fact of being finite, it is actually really liberating and it is a relief.
For as long as you are responding to this idea of having a limited amount of time with stress,
like, oh my God, I've got to try to get a huge amount out of my life because there's so little
of it, you still haven't quite taken on board the implication of it, which is like, no, we're all in
the same boat. There will always be too much to do. There will always be more
ambitions that you can think of than that you could ever put into practice. Always be more
obligations you can feel from the society or from your family or whatever than you could ever
fulfill. And that's really relaxing because then it's like, oh, okay, I don't have to try to do this impossible thing with my life. I can just focus on doing something really meaningful and
possible. I think you're right. I think it really is liberating. One of the ideas that
deeply, deeply resonated with me in the book, this actually helped me make some big life decisions
over the past few months is this idea that yes, we have to get good at saying no to things. But I thought your argument
took it one step further because there's this kind of, I guess, underlying premise that
we have to get good at saying no, because some things actually are just the wrong things.
So actually, let's not even bring them into our life in the first place. But you go one step further ago, actually, no, it's not just about saying no to
things that you don't want to do and don't nourish you. You've actually also got to say no to things
that you do want to do. Yeah, totally. Because I mean, which is mind blowing, actually. It really
is. Yeah, no, I mean, it has been for me as well, right?
Because I think in the background of all the stuff you hear all the time about hand pointers
to say no, there's this implication, as you say, you could just, if you did that, you
could just say no to all the things that are kind of tedious chores, all the things that
don't quite work for you.
And then your life would just be exactly properly fitted to the – like the time you
would have would be exactly fitted to all the things that really matter in your life
and you'd live this sort of perfect match.
But there's no reason to assume that the sort of field of things that matter or that
feel like they matter is only going to be big enough to fill the time you've got rather than exceeding it. I think there's always going to be more things
that feel like they matter because the world is full of countless opportunities and countless
people suffering who need our help and countless good causes and countless interesting places to
visit. All of these, there's just an endless amount. So why on earth would you ever expect that you could fit all of the ones that you
cared about into your life? But we do. I mean, we do expect that sort of chronically. I think
that is actually another of these examples of something that is really liberating because
you can see that you don't have to fight to somehow make time for everything that matters,
that that's kind of a futile quest. You just have to make time for everything that matters, that that's kind of a futile
quest. You just have to make time for some things that matter and let it go, that it's
not going to be everything.
Because otherwise, I guess, you go on that nice holiday. I don't know, let's take a mythical
destination like the Maldives or Bali, right? But then you could arrive back to wherever you live and see online that someone's posted
a gorgeous sunrise photo in Mexico.
So you were in Bali or the Maldives, but you went to Mexico.
So therefore, oh man, I need to see that sunrise in Mexico at some points.
There's always a sense that actually, yeah, this is great, but I could be doing something
more.
Do you feel that the age of the internet and I guess social media, the fact that we've
been exposed to so much possibility now that appears to be infinite possibilities.
So we always feel that our life is somehow a bit mundane because we're not doing all these incredible things that we could be doing.
Totally. I mean, a lot of these places to visit and things to do have always existed,
but now you're sort of relentlessly exposed to them. Algorithms find specifically the ones
you are going to want to really do and sort of constantly bombard you with just those
ones. So yeah, we are in a situation that's completely unprecedented in terms of letting us see and
sort of feel the pain of not being able to do.
I mean, another good example, we talk about beautiful holidays, vacations, that's a great
example, but kind of good causes is another one too, right?
I mean, if you're the kind of compassionately minded person who sits on social media and wants to sort of help people in the world who are suffering, you're
seeing more instances of that and hearing about more instances of that than like the
greatest saints in history ever were ever exposed to. And, you know, it's great if you
can do something about one or two of them, but the idea that you could ever sort of get
your arms around all that, that we're just not designed to be capable of it.
Yeah.
In my book on happiness, I wrote a chapter on eliminating choice that we, in a
world of infinite choice, more choice is not necessarily a good thing.
In fact, we've got to get good at choosing when that choice actually matters.
Yeah.
And I see a similar theme to that throughout your book, this idea that you
can't actually care about everything. You can't put your attention there. The state
of the world at the moment, many people are getting really, really affected in their day
to day life by what they're being exposed to in the news. And there was a gorgeous bit
in your book where you really mentioned that actually, yes, there can be all kinds of adversity
going on and problems, which you may be being exposed to in news, but you may choose to
actually go and care for an elderly relative or you may choose to go and actually care
and do something good in the world in a different way that doesn't actually address that problem.
I thought that was really quite an interesting way of looking at it.
Well, I just think I feel very strongly about this because I really do think that there's
this great temptation, especially when we spend so much of a day immersed in social media or just news and
other forms.
You come to identify with that global level of things and you come to think of wars and
the climate and things as – and they are incredibly important and the climate perhaps
most important of all.
You come to think of that as being the only level on which you can have a meaningful
effect, when in many ways it's the only level on which us as individuals can have almost
no effect in many contexts.
You can give money, you can live more ethically, absolutely.
But it's almost like we're deliberately exposing ourselves most to that level of life at which
our impact can be the smallest.
Then you end up sort of devaluing all these other things that are completely like ought
to be part of the definition of spending your life meaningfully, right?
Caring for relatives, doing something to help make your little neighborhood more beautiful
instead of only thinking on this sort of cosmic scale and global scale.
Not because those global causes are not as important as we thought they were.
I think they are that important.
It's just that if the way you respond to that is suddenly thinking that you have got to
sort of get your arms around it all, then that's just not going to help anyway, right?
Yeah, not only does it not help, it actually then impacts your life and your circle of
influence because if you're that affected by it, it's very hard to be present in your
life.
It's very hard for that not to affect the quality of your work, the quality of your
relationships, your ability to parents, as well as you might want to.
And actually, there's so much in the world
that we actually can't do anything about. And again, I think there's a freedom in just
acknowledging that. That's the big theme I keep getting in your book is this idea that
there are limits. There are limits to what we can do with our time. There are limits
to what we can care about. And this idea that these ideas and these concepts are limitless
is actually part of the problem.
Right. We are finite creatures existing in this world of infinite inputs and opportunities and
suffering and all the rest of it. So there's always going to be this mismatch.
And I think what we spend a lot of our lives doing without realizing it is trying to like get over
that fundamental mathematical fact. And you know, we've talked a lot about leisure and we've talked about doing good and compassionate
activities, but the most obvious one for most people on a day-to-day basis, I think, is
just work, right?
The volume of emails, the volume of things that the boss is asking you to do or that
you want to do in your work.
There's no reason why any of that should have any upper limit.
And yet there's a very, very clear upper limit to how much you can do in a day's work and
how many emails you can answer and how many demands you can meet.
Emails are an interesting one, isn't it?
Because again, if we think back to communication, maybe 20 years ago, maybe 30 years ago, a
lot of the way we got communication or received it was the letterbox in the morning, right?
The mail would come once a day and any important documentation
or anything you had to look at would be in that.
Sure, you might get some phone calls at work potentially, but it wasn't like a constant
stream. It's, you know, email is this, it's like the postman's coming like 24 hours a
day. Literally 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. You know, even on Christmas day, you're
getting promotional emails from like Amazon or whoever else to sell you stuff. So there's no kind
of switch off from that. And I mean, before we get into emails, I think what's really
interesting to me is how you came into writing about time and our relationship to time. Because
from the research I've done, it appears that
you were keen to learn all these productivity tools and actually get better at managing
your time and getting the most, squeezing the most out of every ounce of time. You know,
tell me a little bit about that journey and at what point did you realize actually I'm
playing the wrong game here. Like this is actually futile.
Yeah, it took a long time to get it through my thick skull apparently. But one of the
things I did was I wrote this column for The Guardian for years, a weekly column on psychology
where one of the things I did was to test out a lot of these kinds of techniques. And
that was really useful and interesting and I'm really glad I had the opportunity. But
it was also a little bit enabling of my worst side in a way, right? Here I was thinking that I was one day going to find the perfect set of productivity techniques
and time management techniques that was going to make me capable of doing everything and
not have to say no to anything and not have to worry that I was letting anybody down and
all of this.
And then I had this job where I could justify trying out like another 50 new techniques
and getting hold of another 20 books or courses on the
topic because it was for work.
Actually that was really useful in the end, right?
You sort of get to a point where you're thinking, well, okay, this is like the hundredth way
I've tried to structure my to-do list or organize my day and it isn't bringing me the thing
that I'm trying to get out of it.
Maybe as you say, maybe I'm playing the wrong game here rather than I just haven't found
the right technique.
It's not that these techniques are all rubbish.
It's that if you come at them with what I think a lot of people come at them with, including
me then, which is this desire to somehow feel totally on top of time and on top of your
life and not to have to make difficult decisions about time anymore because you can just handle everything and really feeling secure about your role in your
work and time and all the rest of it.
If you think you're going to get that out of them, you're going to fail because what
that is ultimately deep down, I think, is a desire to not be limited by time in the
way that we all are as humans.
It's a desire to avoid the fact that limited time means you have to make tough choices.
You have to not do things that would matter in order to do other things.
You have to neglect certain potential friendships you could be nurturing in order to focus on
some other relationships in your life. You just have to because we're just finite. And we
and especially me back then, I think, think that a lot of this productivity time management
stuff and other kinds of personal development advice, we think that they're like a backdoor
to get around that. And that just leads to more stress because they're not.
Yeah, it's really beautifully put. I'm drawn to this line in your book, towards the start of the book. The more you try to manage your time with the goal of achieving a feeling of total control and freedom from the inevitable constraints of being human, the more stressful, empty, and frustrating
life gets. I mean, I
think that kind of says it all.
Yeah, thank you. Yes, I hope so. I mean, then there's a flip
side to it, right, which is that when you then what that implies
is that when you can ease up on that desire for control, and for
this kind of unrealistic control, that's when you really
do step into a kind of real agency, that's when you really do step into a kind of real agency.
That's when you can do meaningful and joyful and cool things with your life, right?
So it's not just a matter of this thing you're trying to do is impossible, give up, live
life in despair because there's no point.
It's like, no, that's the bit that if you can drop that, or at least somewhat drop that sort of constant, worried, anxious attempt
to bring the world under your control so you can feel okay about it.
If you can let go of that, that's when you can really like plunge into life and do stuff
that counts and that matters to you because you're no longer wasting all your time and
attention on that pointless quest.
You know, constraints in life, I've come to realise more and more, are actually very
freeing and liberating and actually can actually, I guess, foster a lot of creativity. As you
were describing the impact of that sentence, I was drawn to this interview I heard in the
nineties. I don't know if you enjoyed the band, Crowthered House, I very much did in
the nineties, one of my favourite bands back then. And I remember Neil Finn, the singer and songwriter in the band, I remember once in an interview he
said, yes, there are infinite instruments and musical themes and ideas we could bring in for
any song, but we've decided that we're only going to put on the album what the four of us are able
to play. And you know, some of them could play multiple
instruments, they could play that in the studio, but they weren't going to bring in additional
session musicians with their expertise to put in a saxophone solo here or put something else in here.
You know, that was what about 30 years ago when I heard that interview, but it always stayed with
me because as a musician myself, I've always been tempted to try and actually bring in lots of other
stuff. Oh no, we could get that, we could get that. Oh, wouldn't it be great to have a sax solo here or whatever in anything
you're recording or creating. And I always think back to that, go no, the constraints
bring the creativity. He beautifully articulated how actually, no, the fact that it's only
us four means we have to be more creative. we have to figure out solutions. I see kind
of quite a similar theme here once we put the limits on our time and now actually time
is limited within that constraints. I think we can flourish and I guess be more creative.
I totally, totally agree. And I think in creativity, it's often a matter of bringing in those constraints
like you're talking about there. And then sometimes in our daily time, it's just a matter of seeing that the constraints are there in
a non-negotiable way, whether we like it or not.
I think yes, I think when we do the opposite to that, which is either try to get over all
constraints or to behave as if there aren't any constraints, it can feel it's the more
comfortable path at first sometimes, but it leads nowhere
good because it is so out of touch with reality that that's when you're going to apportion your
time wrongly because you're going to think, well, first of all, I'll answer 100 emails before I get
around to what really matters to me today. Well, if that's because you think you've got more time
than you have, if you understood that you didn't, you might switch those two things around,
spend the first part of the day on the thing that you cared about the most. That's just one example. But it's just a way of acting
that respects the constraints that you're already in. And I don't know if you want to
talk about like distraction at some point, because it's a topic that slightly obsesses
me. I think a lot of what we're doing when we sort of bounce away from our important
work or difficult conversations or whatever it is into just
scrolling down the phone, escaping into the world of cyberspace.
It is because it feels there, like there are no constraints.
It is because it feels like you're just sort of floating through this easy world of limitless
like godlike power.
But we'll know after a day spent doing that instead of the thing that
you knew you meant to do. Like it's not the way to get a purchase on life. It's not a
way to like make a difference in a way that counts.
Maybe that's the appeal. Maybe because we don't recognize there were limitations in
our life. And so therefore we don't acknowledge it, we don't accept it. Maybe that's why scrolling and
disappearing down rabbit holes online feels so good because in that moment there does
appear to be infinite possibility. And maybe we sense a kind of slight disconnect that
in our real life, the offline worlds, there are limitations, but online that doesn't appear
to be any.
No, I think that's exactly that phenomenology, the feeling of being online is absolutely
that one of limitlessness.
It's like, you know, can find out what's going on 5,000 miles away right now.
I can be anyone that I want to be on an anonymous social media platform.
All these different ways in which you do get to be limitless.
And then I think, yeah, in some ways it makes it harder to then like write the chapter you
were trying to write or have the conversation with a romantic partner that is important
but that might leave you feeling emotionally vulnerable.
All these ways in which we come up against our limits day to day life.
It's way more fun to just forget that.
And I think we're all totally susceptible to that, been since the ancient world. It's not that's not new. What's new is that, you know, we
have a big structure of attention based corporations waiting for us to grab us
the moment that that that urge arises. So it's a problematic combo.
Given that time is limited, and we can't do everything that we might want to
do in life. Are you a fan of bucket lists? Depends what you mean, right? Depends how
you relate your bucket list. If a bucket list is something you've got to get through, then
no, I'm not a fan of them. If it's a list of if it's like a menu of things that you
might do, great. That kind of list for those sort of things is fantastic. I think the problem
with bucket lists,
it's basically the same problem as an overfilled email inbox or an incredibly long list of like housework chores you've got to do. It feels like it isn't the same problem because it's a list of
fun stuff instead of like onerous weighty stuff. But the same problem arises that we're exposed to
far more opportunities for things that feel like
we want to do them than we'll get to do. And it's almost harder to spot in the case of
hedonistic type things because, again, you know, like, on some level, all of us
are sort of annoyed by having various duties we don't want to have to fulfill.
But you think of things like that as like, okay, the world is my oyster. But I call it in the book, I call that like existential overwhelm,
because it's still overwhelm. It's just overwhelm that comes from being alive
in the world that we have today, wanting to be limitless in the way that we do want,
and then constantly coming up against the fact that you are limited. So yeah, the person who's retired and has tons of money and is using it all to travel
the world, they will have a better time than the person who has to spend all day doing
tedious chores they didn't want to do, but they'll still have this annoying basic problem
of feeling overwhelmed if they believe that they are ever going to sort of like get
their arms around everything that the world has to offer. See all the places that matter,
have all the fun that there is to be had. It's like, it's beyond us. And it's stressful
to pursue it because it's beyond us.
It really is. I mean, you've quoted the Dowdy Ching on several occasions in the book. There's
a phrase certainly in the translation I have where it says, knowing what is enough
is true wealth. I kind of feel that really fits your entire book, really, this idea that,
you know, knowing what is enough, that's because when we always want more, we think, oh, when
I go on that holiday or when that happens or when I get to inbox zero, I believe you
did at some points.
Oh yes.
Well, maybe let's go into email because I think email is the source of a lot of overwhelm for
people. And I do think that a lot of the productivity advice makes us feel that,
oh, there is a way to master this and get on top. So I'm a black belt at email.
Actually reading your story with that has made me feel a lot better because I'm pretty rubbish at email. And I'm okay with that.
And I've decided I don't want to get good at it. Other things in my life I would like
to get good at, but getting good at email is just not one of them. So maybe you could
expand a little bit on getting to inbox zero, maybe explain what that is for people who
aren't aware. And then also, you know, what did that teach you?
With controversial what it is, people in this world of productivity geekery argue about
what that means.
Okay.
I'm working on the assumption that it means something like the idea that the sort of default
state of your email inbox should be empty.
And so at least every so often, and arguably every day, you should be going through it answering what you need to answer, dealing with what you need to deal with deleting
what you need to delete, it shouldn't be mounting up in this way that is so familiar to so many
people with 10,000 unread messages on the inbox indicator or whatever. The really important
point to make, I think about what happened when I really tried to get on top of email,
is that when you get really good at getting
through your email, what happens is that you get much more email because firstly, you reply to
people more and at a quicker tempo. And so they get back to you at a quicker tempo with the replies
to your replies. And you know, you're busier that way, you get a reputation as being responsive
on email. So more people email you. Whereas if you sort of fail to reply often, what happens
is people find some other solution to the problem that they had. And it just really
dramatizes this idea that the supply is infinite, effectively. Your capacity to get through
that supply of incoming emails, I mean, is very finite. And your attempt to get more
efficient with processing that infinite supply won't get
you to the end of it because it's infinite, but it will get you, leave you more stressed
and busy.
And I think it's worth saying, there are probably some people hearing this who are like, well,
it's all very well for you, or maybe for me to say, well, I don't want to get good at
email.
It's like somebody might say, well, in my job, I get fired if I don't reply to all emails I get.
But the logic applies everywhere.
I think that's a really important thing to try to zero in on.
No matter what your position is or your job or your work, your time is finite.
If you are subjected in any part of that to an infinite supply of something, and you
make your business to get through that, that will end up taking over your whole job.
So I definitely sympathize with anyone who feels that they have to sort of keep it in
box zero just as a basic precondition of their work.
But then they and their employer, whoever is losing out on something else they could
be giving in that situation because it is not actually possible to contain these infinite supplies,
these infinite inputs in the way that we think it ought to be.
Or maybe you love email and you want to be someone who stays on top of all your email,
make that decision, but don't imagine that you're deciding to keep it contained and that's
fine and then you can get on with what really matters.
If you really focus on getting more and more efficient
at an incoming supply of something that is actually limitless, then that will effectively
take over your life. That's just how it works.
I guess what you're talking about, certainly to me, is intentionality about living an intentional
life, like understanding that we're making choices all the time and actually many of
us are making choices that we don't even realise we're making. Which I thought was really interesting.
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Just wanted to take a moment to tell you about my first ever UK theatre tour taking place this March.
So I've just finished two days rehearsing for the show with the entire tour team,
the director, video tech, sound crew, tour manager.
And I'm even more excited for these live shows than I was when I first announced the tour.
Now if you enjoy listening to my podcast, I think you are going to love coming to this
tour.
Don't think of it like a book tour.
Think of it as an immersive, transformative, fun evening where you will walk away with a personalized
blueprint of the things you need to work on in your own life. It's not just me on a stage
talking to you. There will be lots of interactive moments and a few surprises.
Now, I know that many of you listen to this podcast to learn things that will help you thrive.
But I also know that at times it can feel hard.
On this tour, you are going to be in a room with other people who are interested in the
same things as you are, which will feel incredibly special and give you a massive boost.
These events are going to be fun, inspirational, educational,
and hopefully will be the springboard you need to take action as we move out of winter and get into
spring. There are 14 shows all around the UK. The two warm-up dates in Wilmslow and the London
Lyceum date has just sold out. So don't delay if you plan
on picking up tickets. All details can be seen at DrChatterjee.com forward slash events.
So get your friends together, make a night of it and I hope to see you in person in just
a few weeks. Yeah, I think this goes to the heart of it for me because it's tempting to think that
in a book like this or lots of other people writing on this kind of topic that I'm saying,
why don't you live a limited life?
Why don't you decide to live
in a way that is finite instead of limitless? And it's like, no, the point is you already
are doing every day, whether you like it or not. You already are making something like
a choice to sacrifice all sorts of things in favor of other things. That's already happening.
The choice we have is whether to do that consciously or not. You are always choosing. It wouldn't be the case if you had
eternal life, if you were limitless, if you were infinite, you know, because then there'd
always be more time to try everything and to do everything. But because we're not, because
we're finite, every choice you make is a choice not to do something else with that little
portion of your finite time. And I think the freedom that we can aspire to, we can't be free of that situation, but the freedom we can aspire
to is the freedom of making those decisions consciously and seeing like, okay, you know,
I've decided that this matters more than this for today. And it's not because that other
thing doesn't matter. It's because I've got to make a choice. At the start of the book, you talk about a lot of these productivity hacks and you talk
about some of these books that we've been exposed over the years, like Tim Ferriss's
The Four Hour Workweek. And I've got to be honest, for me, when I first read The Four
Hour Workweek, I don't know, 10 years ago. It was pretty life-changing
for me because at that time in my life, I had not come across something like that. And
I mean, I think the title is just super catchy title, but I don't think it's about working
four hours a week. What I took from it was that, oh, time is a resource. It's a commodity
that I can value as such. And I honestly think
that was one of the first times in my life where I kind of saw time and suddenly started
to measure it and value it, which I think was necessary for my progression to understand
that actually maybe I need to defend my time a bit better and maybe I need to think about
how I use it or, you know, protect it or give it away, whatever that might be.
But like with most messages, they're never perfect for everyone at every aspect of life.
I think that works for me back then.
But I'm really fascinated by the argument making the book that even seeing time as a
resource, as a commodity that we need to defend and protect. You're also making the case that
even that is fundamentally problematic. And I think I agree. I think I really agree with
what you're saying. So I think for me, what perhaps you could speak to that, but I guess for me,
that message that time is something I need to view differently, absolutely worked for me
10 years ago. And now I feel that it's the next stage. It's
like, okay, cool. Now you're valuing time. Now actually, maybe the way you're experiencing
time and looking at time isn't that helpful.
Yeah. I mean, I just think both of these things are true. I think there's tons of huge value
in the four hour workweek. And one of the things that I think is so interesting about the focus of that book is
on the idea of not deferring the sort of joy that you want to have in your life until some point
in the future when you're going to be ready to have it. I just agree with that completely. This
idea of, I think he calls them mini retirements, right? This idea that like, how can you spend
three weeks this year doing one of these things that you're mentally postponing to some time that might not even arrive in several decades time? No, do it now.
I think that's absolutely bang on. I think that seeing time as a very precious resource is like
one lens that really counts because the alternative is to act like you've got all the time in the
world. That is very dangerous. But yeah, as you say, there's this other lens, which is like, the whole notion of the sort of
resource view of time, the idea that there's me, and then there's some time that I have,
a little bit like some money that I have, or some physical possessions that I have or something,
it doesn't quite work. And it leads us into some strange places because actually, you know, we don't have time in that sense, right?
You don't – you just get one moment at a time.
You can't actually put time aside.
You can't pause time.
You can't decide to not spend the next minute of your life.
Like, you're just living it.
You're just in it.
It's a fairly involved argument at that point in the book, but I think that the basic point
here is just that if you try to take this attitude of making the best use of something,
when in fact, it's more like you just are a portion of time in some mysterious way,
right?
Let me see if I can convey this.
It's like you're trying to get sort of on top of your own life.
You're trying to be like the air traffic controller of things somehow.
That sort of alienates you from actually being here, right here in the moment of your life, because everything, I mean,
apart from anything else, everything becomes a question of like, am I using this our best for,
what is it, some future goal to make the most money to achieve this outcome I want, to please
achieve this outcome I want to please somebody who I think needs to be pleased in my life. And if you're only asking about your time, am I using it in the right way for that future goal?
It's almost impossible to find it truly meaningful and absorbing in the moment,
because those are just two different, fundamentally different lenses, right? So in a way, you almost have to be willing to waste time if what we mean by waste time
is not be using it in an instrumental way in order to use it well, which is a total
weird paradox that I'm still trying to get my mind around.
These are these big existential questions like who are we?
What does it mean to live a good life, a meaningful life?
I love the idea that if you're constantly analyzing and seeing, am I
using my time well, yeah, you're not in your life, you're outside of your life
looking in, which can have value from time to time, but if that's the kind of,
if you're spending all of your waking hours like that every day, you're never
in your life and actually experiencing it.
There's a real theme.
But there's a real theme, I find as I read the book, that you do mention Buddhist philosophy at times, you mentioned Zen philosophy.
And ultimately, it's about presence, isn't it?
It's about being present with your time, being in the moment because what is time?
But I love the argument in the book that you don't have time. It's not something you can own. You know, your life is time. Like you
can't have it and package it up and carry it around with you. It's kind of, because
what's happening as you're doing that is you're spending time.
Yeah. Yeah, no, it's really, it's quite sort of, no, it can really sort of bend your brain
quite a bit. But like, I mean, One way into this that I always think is interesting is, anyone hearing this, when you think about
your time in that sort of abstracted way, you think about questions like, when am I
next going on holiday?
Or have I got enough time to do this project by Friday afternoon?
Or am I free on Saturday morning?
Whatever images come into your mind when you try to think about that, it might be calendars
or it might be little yardsticks or anything.
It's something to do with space.
It's not time.
This is a point that philosophers have made in the past.
It seems like we can only think about time in a subtracted way by turning into space. So you're always thinking about like, oh, there's that day,
and there's that day, and in your mind, there's some sort of thing in space.
And I think what that is a clue to is that time in reality is not what we think it is, right? It isn't this thing that we
have. It isn't this thing that sort of we can control what's going to happen in this
box of it here and in this box not there, you know, which is all again, these spatial
metaphors. Actually, I think it makes more sense to think that we just are a stretch of time.
We're so deeply in our time.
We can try to make it objective by drawing calendars and thinking about timelines and
all that stuff.
But actually what time really is, is just for each of us, is just like you living your
life.
I'm not sure that words can actually get to this, but maybe this helps a little bit.
No, it's such an important point because time is life.
How we spend our time, how we experience that defines our experience of life.
Right?
It's the same thing, isn't it?
It's absolutely the same thing.
And like, I've often thought over the last years, you know, what is time anyway? Certainly
clock time. It's a human construct, right? In fact, as I've gone down this road, I no
longer wear a watch because actually, and I get that, you know, we can't be constrained
by the infinite possibility that there is no time. You know, we have to meet people
or do things at a certain time. But I don't wear a watch. I used to do my entire life
from being a young kid. I used to love seeing what time it is. But then suddenly your experience of everything is
defined by, well, how long have I got left? How long have I been doing this for? Which kind of
takes you out of the experience. I know this sounds deeply philosophical, I guess it is.
There's a writer who I quote in the book, David Cain, a Canadian writer writer and blogger whose work I really admire, who makes this point that when you think you
have three hours to complete some project, or say you've got to tidy the house and you've
got half an hour to do it or something, you don't really have three hours or have half
an hour. What you mean is you expect it. It means your best guess in the present moment
now is that nothing's going to get
in your way until the three hours when the next thing's going to happen or you have to go and
pick up your kids from school, whatever. That's actually a really deep contrast, that notion of
actually having time versus just saying, no, I expect it. I'm here in the present moment,
and I believe that things are going to unfold in this way in the future. But none of us have any control over the future,
like true control. And so because we want that control, because we want to be limitless
about in that sense as well, in the sense of being able to like dictate what's going
to be happening, that's just a constant recipe for anxiety because our desire to control the next moment is rubbing up against the absolute knowledge that actually you can't.
If you're a chronic worrier about trains and travel-related things, which I definitely
have some experience of, you sit there in the present moment, hoping that you're going
to get to the station on time or hoping that the train's going to arrive on time. And it feels in that moment like once that thing happens and it's
on time, you're going to be able to relax. But you're never going to be able to relax
because then there's the next thing, right? Then will the train arrive on time? Will there
be a taxi if you need to get a taxi?
And you say in the present moment, you're not actually in the present moment, are you?
Because you're planning for the future and when that happens. And you're trying to reach out to the present moment and exert some control over the next one.
Of course, that's going to be a recipe for anxiety because that's not possible.
And I think it's fine to plan. It's fine to say, here's how I'd like today to go.
Here's what, when I have some say in how today goes, I'm going to steer in this direction rather
than that direction. Fine. But this idea that you're like, controlling the future from the present, again, it's kind of a,
it gets kind of deep, but I think it's, I think we're all prone to it.
Yeah, it is deep. But I think it's such an important, it's an important point for us all
to consider. I wonder, you know, procrastination is something that many people struggle with.
Oh, yes.
You know, yeah.
Me too.
Yeah.
And I wonder, what do you think is going on in procrastination?
Do you think it's to do with this fact that we don't recognize the limitations of time,
therefore we think there's infinite possibilities, but there isn't?
You know, how do you see procrastination?
I think there are lots of different flavors of procrastination.
So there are people who are very afraid of failing. There are a few people who are
very afraid of succeeding. There are people who have all sorts of other different psychodramas
going on. We're all different and messed up in different ways. But the argument that I make
that sort of brings all that or tries to bring all that together is that whenever you're
procrastinating on something that matters to you,
you are trying to avoid some kind of experience of encountering your limitations. If I'm
procrastinating on writing a chapter of a book, the reason that I'm not... I mean, I care about
that thing and I don't particularly care about what I'm doing instead, which is probably like scrolling or cleaning the kitchen when it doesn't really need cleaning as
a displacement activity or something. It seems at first weird that I would want to procrastinate on
the thing I care about rather than do the things I don't care about. But I think that's because,
and again, I'll stick with this writing example just for a minute. For me to actually write a chapter is to risk that I don't have what it takes to write the
chapter or I don't have enough time to finish the thing on deadline or that it won't be
well received by people who I would like to receive it well.
All these kind of ways in which I can't control the experience are brought up when I'm doing
something that I care about. And that makes
it very tempting to just not go there. And if you are, that's perfectionism is a big part of this.
And I feel like certainly historically, that was like my problem to a T. Like the one way to feel
totally in control of some project that you really care about in your life, and like it is totally
perfect still, is never to start it, right?
Because then you've got this beautiful mental image of this song you're going to write,
or marriage you're going to have, or house you're going to find, or book you're going
to write.
And it's pristine.
It doesn't need to, nothing can go wrong with it as long as it is completely unreal.
And then the moment that it actually starts being created because you're doing something
in the real world, in one way or another, you're going to run up against the inevitability
of imperfection and limit.
It's going to be hard or it's going to be uncertain or it's going to be a little bit
less than the perfect image you'd had of it or something. And that's just baked in to bringing it into reality. So then I think it becomes very
tempting for people to never quite get started on things because it feels nicer and more powerful
in a way. If you feel more powerful while you haven't like let it out into the world, it's a
bogus kind of power because obviously you haven't done it.
And you've also got that sense of control because it's still undone. So actually there's
still that control. I could do it. I wanted to do it. I could do it. But yeah, perfectionism
is hugely problematic. I've also had those tendencies for much of my life. And I think
I would say that that is largely or certainly in a huge, in huge part, I think of the past,
like I really feel I've let go of that in many ways. And it's been liberating. As we
sit a recording, you know, my fifth book came out about a week ago, right? Fifth book in
five years. And-
I need to ask you about productivity.
If someone had told me that six years ago, I'd have thought no way, no way can I write
five books in the next five years.
But it's not just that.
It's this idea that I've had a deadline to work to and this idea that when that deadline is there, when the manuscript gets sent off to
print, it will be as good as I could do at that moment.
It doesn't mean the ideas stop.
It doesn't mean like, I know if I had two more months, the book will be different because
the ideas don't just stop at that time.
The limitation is there.
And therefore it's just a snapshot in time of the best I could do around the idea at that
time. And that's liberating because then when you are up against the deadline, it's like, well,
hey, it's going to be good to go then. And it will be what it will be. Perfection, it's never quite
done. I think that goes back to what you're talking about. The idea about time
is that there are limits. There's no way to perfectly spend your day. Maybe that's the
myth that we're sold these days, which is why your book is such a welcome antidote to
that. It's kind of like that doesn't exist. No one is spending the perfect day.
Yeah. I think perfection, pretty much by definition, perfection doesn't exist in reality.
And that is at the core of all of this, right?
So how come you're not a perfectionist anymore?
Well, I don't know that I'm not a perfectionist, but I'm definitely in recovery to a significant
extent.
And I think that, you know, lots of different parts of that puzzle.
One is just, you know, something in me something deep in me, steered me into newspaper journalism first as a way
of working in a very deadline driven environment like that will have a tendency to slightly
beat the perfectionism out of you because you'll get to whatever it was, Monday, Tuesday
morning and you still haven't got a good idea for your weekly column.
Well, then you have to use one of the bad ideas.
Like, I mean, of course.
And what you learn after a while is, bears very little resemblance to the output anyway.
Like very often the bad ideas are the best columns.
Very often the columns that I thought were least good were the ones that people seemed
most excited by.
You know, it's like, just don't know.
I've got no idea.
So you might as well just do it.
That was part of it.
And then writing this book in a different way. I think becoming a parent is an interesting part
of this because then you're in this relationship where like, I mean, it's true of all relationships,
but it's very obvious with small children, they're just going to keep, you can't press pause,
like they're just going to be a day older tomorrow and a day older after that. Very swiftly,
you can prepare when you know a baby's coming. You can prepare to try to be perfect in those first
months or something. But as soon as you're then in it, it's all moving so fast.
Obviously, there's not going to be any perfection here. Obviously, it's just going to be constant
improvisation and winging it, which we all are doing all the time anyway.
It's part of the problem that we now live in a very individualistic society where we are told
we can do anything we want. You write about the digital nomad and how that's a misnomer, actually,
in terms of how we actually articulate that. This idea though
that we can be anything we want, we can master our schedules, our time, we can travel when we want,
we want to work in a coffee shop, we can do all that. But by having no limits,
it's actually problematic. And I love this idea that we potentially should be constrained by the
limits of community and people around us in a way that we're not anymore.
So maybe you could speak to that a little bit.
Yeah, I think this is a really important part of it all.
The way that certain kinds of tradition, including but not limited to religious traditions, you
know, one of the things they do is they impose some kind of temporal structure on life.
So they make it that you do certain things at certain times, whether you like it or not.
If you are people who are religious and go to church or another place of worship on a
regular basis will understand this notion, right?
You don't just go when you really feel like it and the benefit of it is something more
than that.
But likewise, if you go to a band rehearsal or choir or you meet people to play a football match on a weekly
basis or something.
It only has the value it has because you've all decided that you're all going to be in
the same place at the same time.
It can't work otherwise.
Yet, at the same time, as we have all these very obvious examples staring us in the face
of how you have to be synchronized, you have to give up a little bit of personal dictatorship
over your schedule in order to get these benefits. At the same time, we have this cultural value that says,
yeah, the goal here for everybody in their ideal world should be to be absolutely in control of
their own schedules, to get up every morning like the dream would be. You get up every morning,
you do exactly what you want to do at exactly whatever time you want. And I use the
digital nomad in the book as an example of that, right? That's sort of the epitome of this, this
idea, I'm going to go and work from a beach, wherever, you know, it's all just going to be
me in charge. And more honest people who've done that will tell you that one of the key characteristics
of that life is that it gets quite lonely, because you're not held in any of those kind of webs and you're not able
to sort of participate in those kinds of rhythms precisely you sort of placed yourself outside
of that in your pursuit of total freedom.
So one of the things that I've really found in my own life in the last few years for sure,
and this is partly to do with how becoming a parent binds you to other people's rhythms
more closely, rhythms of school, rhythms more closely. Rhythms of
school, rhythms of after school things, rhythms of play dates, and you have to work with your
spouse in a completely different way. All of this, again, it's true for everybody. It's
just very clear for parents, I think, is that these are good things. These are benefits.
They definitely frustrate me sometimes. It's not like I find them super enjoyable every day all the time.
But the alternative of just sort of drifting like one little atom through the world is
not a preferable alternative.
The sacrifice that I have to make of the part of myself that would love to just like drop
a schedule at eight o'clock in the morning where I just got to say everything.
Like that sacrifice is worth making for a fulfilling life.
Yeah.
I hope that last section is empowering for many people listening or watching at the moment,
Oliver. for many people listening or watching at the moment, Oliver, because I think if you are,
you know, if you have a busy family life and you know, there's work and then there's, you've
got to sort the kids out and you know, and Saturday means swimming lessons or whatever
is going on. It's tempting, isn't it? To think, oh man, look at those guys who are just free
and they can travel the world on their laptop and they've got nothing. Right? Nothing. But I think what you said there,
hopefully is like, Hey, listen, the grass, the grass is usually never greener on the
other side of every life in life. Right. But that comes at a cost. That's a cost to everything.
That comes at a cost. You're doing it by yourself. You don't have this structure in this community.
Like I even noticed I've been a father now for over 11 years. I've lived with my wife and
my two kids. And if they ever go away, let's say, I don't know, they're away for two nights
somewhere while I'm working and they've gone away to like, you know, my wife's parents
or wherever. You know, initially, it feels, oh man, I've got, oh, I could do this, I could
do that, I could do whatever I want.
And then you just sort of waste it.
Yeah, and you waste it. And then...
It's not that fun.
It's not that fun. You're like, oh, like, I can't wait till the bat.
Yes, no, I know that. I totally know that feeling. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah.
And even that term waste, right, I wrote that down before. I want to talk about this concept
of wasting time because wasting time, I think, is what we say in reference to what we think
we should be doing with our time, which is maximising every moment of it. And actually
some of the most pleasurable experiences when we actually, by society standard, are wasting time doing
nothing, staring at the birds. Because then we feel we're wasting time, that means we're
wasting our lives. And therefore, oh, we should be doing more. But actually, those little
moments where you do waste time, well, that's kind of what life's about, isn't it?
No, I think so. Language gets in the way here, right? Because wasting is a bad thing almost by definition. But actually, we've come to define using time well
in a way that excludes lots and lots of really pleasurable and enjoyable and meaningful
experiences. Again, I think where we use that word is we judge experiences that aren't leading
somewhere, right? So we think of a day being wasted if I haven't made progress towards my various
goals that are in the future. That's important. Of course, everyone has some kind of outcomes
that they're working towards. But if you define every moment that doesn't add up towards those
outcomes as wasted, then yeah, you're going to miss the very substance of being alive.
Yeah, no, totally. It always reminds me, I don't know if this
is quite the right parallel, but it's almost this idea that once you stop focusing on where
you're getting, you actually have a fuller experience. It always reminds me of my experience
and I feel like half the people I ever have this conversation with about doing a driving
test were like about half people I've ever discussed this with say that it was only after they were absolutely convinced they failed because they screwed
up in the first few minutes of their driving test, but they were able to like relax into
their driving test and pass it and do really well. It's a very common experience with driving
tests. And it's just this notion. I like it because it really speaks to this idea that
like sometimes you need to not be trying to make the most of an experience or to achieve
certain outcome in order to just be most relaxedly in it.
And then you find, as in the driving test case, that you also do accomplish things in
those moments.
So you're probably watching the birds or the flowers or something, and you do get a really
good idea for some piece of work that you've been like stumped on, right? But only because you weren't really trying to do that.
Tell me a little bit about your friend's apartment in New York, where the lift,
I believe, stops on every floor between Friday evening and Saturday evening.
I think I really, really liked that example, because it speaks to something I've been thinking
about in my life for a few years, which I'll go into in just a moment. But could you maybe
paint the picture of the apartment block?
Yeah, this is on the Lower East Side, which is historically and traditionally a very Jewish
part of Manhattan. And the Shabbat elevator is designed so that Jews who follow the Sabbath
restrictions don't
have to press a button in the elevator because pressing a button to make an electrical connection
is an example of lighting a fire, I think is how the sort of scholarly, legalistic approach
to this goes. And so in order to avoid that and allow people to get off at their floors
and get on and to leave the building, the elevator has to stop at every single floor regardless. It does seem a little bit absurd,
but it's almost, you know, a lot of these rules, both in Judaism and Christianity and
elsewhere about sort of what you can't do on a day of rest, they kind of have to be
absurd, at least to secular ears or at least to anybody.
Because if you only do the things that seem reasonable to you to bring yourself to rest,
to end work, then you won't actually start working.
You'll be like, well, okay, maybe I should take a couple of hours, but it's reasonable
for me to spend a couple of hours in my email inbox this afternoon as well.
All the people and the traditions and the religions who have developed these different notions of Sabbaths or days of rest, they've all ended up with some
combination of restrictions that almost seem a little bit too much, a little bit overkill,
because it is so hard for us. We're so wired to just keep going and keep the flywheel spinning.
hard for us. We're so wired to just keep going and keep the flywheel spinning. So, you know, that's why I bring that up. It's like a very vivid example of like, okay, I'm going to
have to wait every floor and stop and the doors can open and they're going to close.
And like, you know, if you live on the 25th floor of a high rise apartment building, it's
good time to develop some patience. They do feel absurd relative to what is the norm now
with our secular mindset, with our individual mindset that we can do whatever we want,
whenever we want. I'm not following those restrictions. I'm not going to have someone
tell me what I'm going to do on Sundays or Saturdays. But I've really been coming
around over the last years that we need to all of us self-impose Sabbaths on our life.
I think I shared this story once on the podcast before, but a friend of mine, who I've only got to know in the last few years,
we once went round for, I think Sunday lunch, and I met her and her husband and the children and my family went and they're a Jewish family and they've always followed
the Sabbath. So between, you know, Friday evening and Saturday evening, I don't know the exact
rules that were followed, but it would be family time. They would spend it together. I think family
would come around potentially, they wouldn't answer the phone, they wouldn't go out and do things,
school clubs, all that kind of stuff.
And I just thought, isn't that incredible?
Because you can always fill up the time.
I was actually literally chatting to my wife about this about three hours ago, before you
arrived about, you know, a hobby that one of my kids can do at the weekends.
And this would take place, I think, every Sunday afternoon. And
we were just sort of discussing the pros and cons. Yeah, there's loads of pros. But also,
I think we just need to be really careful because I love the idea of trying to introduce
some sort of Sabbath into our weekend where as a general rule, I don't know whether it
would be Saturday or Sunday, we're not going to do activities. Like maybe it's we get your parents around every week at that
time. Maybe we create an environment whereby, I'm not going to be looking at email on that
day. We're not going to be doing, you know, I think it really speaks to the central themes
in your book, this idea that there's always something you could do and we can make an
argument that, oh yeah, that will give these benefits and that will give that benefit. But there's a cost.
There's a cost to all of those things. Families are disintegrating. There's not enough time for
people to spend with their families. I certainly feel I've been guilty of that certainly with our
wider family. What if every Sunday, for example, it's like, no, we're not doing stuff. We're either
going for walks in nature or we're having rounds, or we're enjoying meals together.
That actually self-imposed restriction, I think would yield so many benefits.
I think you're right.
And I mean, I feel like I'm done yet.
No, no, I was gonna say I feel like my family is in a similar situation, like sort of you
toy with these things and you have big dreams about them, but then you have to integrate them
into the reality of existence.
I think a big part of that too is expectations.
One thing that I've really found in myself is that if I'm going to expect in the course
of a day at the weekend to spend some really good quality time with my family and also do a couple of hours
work because I need to.
That is a recipe for just so much sort of the friction between those, like bothers me
and causes me anxiety and all the rest of it.
If it's just decided and agreed since long in advance that Saturday or Sunday is not
going to be a day for work things, then broadly speaking,
the work fits in to the rest of the time perfectly well enough.
It takes the containers that it has.
Work will always fill every container you give it.
What's that law?
The-
Parkinson's law.
Yeah.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
Work will expand to fill the time available for its completion.
The reverse of that, which by the way is one of the reverse of Parkinson's Law is part of what the four hour work week gave us, right? What will also
to some extent, at least, contract to fill the space available if you give it less time.
So if you have four hours to complete something, you'll probably do it in about four hours.
And if you have eight, it'll take eight. And so maybe just don't give it those four hours
at the weekend. Yeah. Yeah.
I do think a lot about this self-imposed Sabbath, but again, this is why I think one of the big problems now is that to do that,
you have to swim against the current, right? Because let's say you live in a,
I guess say, let's say you're surrounded by a strong Jewish community and let's
say everyone around you observes a Sabbath.
Much easier to go along with it.
Much easier.
And actually, you know, there are downsides to this, like it's impossible not to in some
ways, in some contexts, in very sort of Orthodox and conservative cultures, it becomes too
little freedom.
But yeah, I don't think that too little freedom in our temporal rhythms is most people's problem
these days, at least outside of the work setting. They may have
lots of very rigid rules they have to follow about when they work, but they don't have rigid rules
to follow about resting. Yeah. And I guess, I didn't grow up with that. So maybe I'm seeing
this as this phenomenal thing that, you know, maybe people who've grown up with that find,
or some people maybe find that restrictive and like the freedom of not having to do that.
But the idea of society dictating our behaviors, I think is, I think it's really interesting.
You know, I went to a wedding, like maybe 10 years ago, one of my mates was getting
married in France.
I think I flew out for the weekends and, you know, hired a car and drove.
I can't remember where it was now, but I remember on the Sunday morning driving back to get
my flight.
I kept driving through little villages and they were like ghost towns. All the shops
were shut. People weren't out and about. And it was very much this kind of French way of
life that that was, you know, we're not shopping on a Sunday. We're just spending time together,
you know, doing whatever we do. And even this idea of stopping for meals. That's a very
French concept.
Right. Yeah. They have certain. They're doing certain things right.
Yeah. And there's this thing called the French paradox. Why is it that the French can supposedly
eat so many rich and delicious and tasty foods, yet not have the consequences associated with them?
And there's all kinds of theories in terms of what the food is that they're consuming. But I think
in terms of what the food is that they're consuming. But I think a big part is not only what they're eating,
it's how they're eating.
It's they're eating when their bodies are in rest
and digest mode, not also trying to send emails
and in that kind of stress state where you're just trying
to shove that in while I, you know, it's, I really think,
and that's still there in France.
I was interviewed by French journalists a couple of years ago.
At the end of the interview, I said,
hey, can I just ask you, like, this
is my mythical idea of France. Does it still go on? Is this really what's happening where
people stop for lunch and they don't email at the same time as the show is absolutely
the only place where it's starting to go. It's like in Paris, international companies,
financial institutions and things. Yeah, that's where that culture starts to go. But apart
from that, this is kind of, do you know what I mean?
Yeah, no. And it's reminding me, I mentioned it briefly in the book of this experience in Sweden,
of the coffee breaks that they have in Swedish workplaces called the Fika, where basically the
same time every day, if you work for a company that has maybe 200 people in it, say 300 people,
they will basically all stop at the same time and go to some communal part of the building and have tea and coffee and pastries at the same time in the afternoon.
You don't have to do it.
I'm sure that in plenty of businesses in Stockholm, people have meetings when they have meetings.
It was really striking that this rhythm was broadly followed by everybody. It becomes this kind of way for companies to, for sort of chief executives to get to
talk to everyone in the organization because the sort of hierarchies are suspended.
It becomes this kind of rhythmic part of the day where everyone knows that it's an okay
time to stop because there's no, you know, you're the weird one if you do keep grinding
through instead of stopping.
It's just another example of one of these things where there's a tradition that is holding people in place
in a way that is actually freeing in the end, right, that they submit to this limitation on
their autonomy. I really enjoyed that chat for the book. And when you speak about Fika, there was also you were
talking about these ideas that actually, part of the reason we
enjoy weekends is because most people are also off at weekends.
Right.
Right. I thought that was a really interesting concept.
Again, coming down to this individualistic culture where
we can do whatever we want. If I want to take a Tuesday off, I'm
gonna take a Tuesday off.
There's this research, this fascinating research that shows that people in long term unemployment
are much happier at weekends than in the weekday as well. In the context of these studies,
they have the same amount of time. They have too much time. They don't want to be unemployed.
But the fact that the weekends is when everybody is off and there isn't that sort of sense
of pressure that you should be doing something else, but there is also the possibility to
spend time with the people you care about the most, you know, that transforms their
experience.
They have the same amount of time every day because they don't work.
But actually, and I think retirees, this applies to as well in certain contexts.
Yeah, I can imagine that.
I guess, you know, in the UK where we have bank holidays, obviously
slightly extended weekends, but maybe they're so valuable these days because almost the
traditional weekend has been eaten up into and eroded. So it actually semi doesn't exist
half the time with people, but maybe a bank holiday weekend where there's three days in
a row. So maybe the first day you just spent kind of still just catching up
with emails and you thought you couldn't finish. And then by the time you actually get into
the second or third day, you're actually beginning to rest. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But this idea that
you then you go around or into your local town or village or whatever, and everyone
also has the same kind of mood. So you're not like out of step with what's going
on around you. Which again is, I think one of these other problems about life these days
is that we, we often are, we're not quite in tune with what's going on around us because
there are no set rules anymore. You know, I love this, the research on that people who
follow religious practices are happier, not necessarily people who are
religious, people who follow religious practices because, you know, community, getting together,
be kind to other people. I don't know, there's something, there's something that we've really
lost haven't we, as we've become more and more secular, as we become more and more apparently
the masters of our destiny and in control of whatever we want. We've lost
something very important.
No, I think that's really true. There's that saying that tradition knows more than you
do or knows better than you do. I mean, these are acknowledging all the downsides and all
the ways in which very important freedoms exist that didn't exist, especially for different
demographics of people and all the rest of it. There is such a thing as a tradition or a practice standing the test of time and having sort of embodied in
it the fact that it's been a sort of live experiment for centuries about what people
need in their lives. And it's extremely tempting for us, especially today for various reasons,
to assume that we must know better than that. And, you know, especially
in these contexts where it does require some surrender of personal autonomy, it does require
sort of a bit of discomfort or like, oh, you know, do I actually have to like, do this
meditation practice today, even on the days that I don't want to do it or go to church
on the days when I don't want to do it? It's like, well, yes, on some level, that's the
point. Yeah.
I mean, community is one of the big secrets to Parkrun success, you know, and
as a family who very much engaged with Parkrun and it helps provide the
framework to our weekend, really, you know, Saturday mornings means a rain or
shine, my son and I will be going down to the local park.
Yeah.
And if that was left to us, as it was in the
lockdowns when part one didn't exist, it was left to us. And you know what? We never went
running. It was a struggle. Like I would try and sometimes persuade him or maybe it was
myself I need persuading, but it didn't happen. But we haven't missed one in months because
there's almost that constraint that we know
it's not a negotiable in our heads.
Like if you have to decide everything, oh, shall I do this?
Shall I do this?
No.
Saturday mornings are parkrun mornings.
We will be there at this time.
And we know, borrowing some sort of injury or mishap, we will have both completed 5K in
some form. And I think that's why Parkrun in secular societies, I feel that's one of
the big strengths of Parkrun is it's giving us a sense of community. And you get to know
the people and I mean, my son loves it. People say hi to him, they go, oh, nice run last
week. See how good he feels. This is what we're missing, the sense of belonging, the sense of community.
And your book, it's got so many wonderful ideas on time and our relationship to time
and how we perceive time. But ultimately, if it's all down to us, it's going to be pretty
tricky, isn't it? Because you need help from the world around you.
Absolutely. And I think the parkrun is such a great example because it, in a way, it does something
very cunning, right? Which is that you're sort of taking a very individualistic desire that people
have, which is fitness, which often gets very heavily individualized in the way people think
about it. And then it's like a bait and switch because actually, as you say, such a great benefit is, is the fact that it's that it's
communal. I think meditation, sometimes people have this experience to they sort of get into
meditation because they want to focus better and do better in their work or be more
self disciplined or something. And then they realize that they've suddenly like started going
on retreats and really enjoy the sense of communality that comes from those things. There's a sort of interesting dynamic goes on there when people come to something
for individualistic reasons and then actually benefit for communal ones.
Yeah. And I guess that's okay, right? Because we're all on a journey and we're all kind
of approaching these things at different times. You mentioned your Guardian column, which
is, you know, it was very well read all over the world. Your last column
has proven to be quite iconic. I don't know how many times I've seen it being shared.
It's really, really good. And I wonder actually, when you started writing this book, because
actually some of the ideas in it, when is it from two years ago?
Yeah, the book was well advanced by the time I wrote that last column.
Yeah, because there's some very similar.
My mind was in the same place.
Yeah, for sure. What was it called again, the final column?
They called it Eight Secrets to a Fairly Fulfilled Life, which was... I don't deserve
the credit for that. That was a great Guardian Production person coming up with that idea.
I love that. A Fairly Fulfilled Life. Do you have a Fairly Fulfilled Life now?
I think so, yeah. I think it's a great standard to aim for. But then again, it's sort of a constant work in progress.
I mean, I sometimes think there's a risk of the stuff that I write and talk about that
people ask whether I'm sort of calmer and less stressed about things now.
And I think like I am, but it should be my wife who you're interviewing for that question
really because I don't want to claim that I'm effortlessly
easy to live with or something.
I do think that, I mean, a big part of it, I mean, yes, I am, in lots of ways, I'm just
a calmer and more fulfilled person than I used to be, but a big part of it also is this
thing about how quickly you can get back on the wagon.
So it's not, I think with this kind of ideas about time that I've spent a lot of time exploring,
they don't make you into someone who never gets stressed about work or never procrastinates,
but or something like that, but you see, oh, I'm doing that thing again.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And you know why you're doing it. And you're sort of forgiving of yourself because
the reason why you're doing it is a totally human desire to have more control than we can have.
And then you can just be like, okay, all right, not going to do that anymore for today, I'm going to go back to a better
way of being. And you know, it's back and forth, back and forth,
two steps forward, one step back or whatever. But that's fine.
That awareness, I think is a massively important step for all
of us, just because we might know something or write about
something doesn't mean we can always apply it. But I think it does give us an awareness sometimes. I think your book
will give people a huge awareness of why they make certain decisions, why certain things
end up frustrating them. Like it doesn't mean that you can necessarily change it all straight
away, but just being aware, you're like, oh, I get it. Oh, I'm doing that thing. Even this kind of, this whole idea of work-life balance.
A lot of people are,
I know there will be people listening and watching
right now at this minute who are struggling
and think at some point I'm going to,
yeah, at this point,
work-life balance is gonna be nailed.
But that's a myth, isn't it?
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I think it is. I think that what work-life balance sounds so lovely, what it tends to end up meaning
in people's lives is that they feel the pressure to be 100% perfect at work and 100% perfect
in life outside work.
That starts to become impossible because 100% plus 100% is 200%. And so I think that, you know, that kind of, it's an especially vicious
kind of pressure because it comes wrapped in this notion of like work-life balance is
just a lovely thing and actually struggling to achieve it is an awful thing to do because
it is basically impossible, I think. And people are holding themselves under the guise of
seeking more calm and balance in their lives. They people are holding themselves under the guise of seeking more calm and balance in
their lives.
They're actually holding themselves to quite a cruel standard that they could maybe just
ease up on a bit.
And what would that look like?
Well, it might, for example, look like a seasonal approach to imbalance.
It might look like saying, if you're a young adult early in your career, something to be
said for going all
in on your career for a while.
If you are the parents of young children, you may have to do a certain amount of work,
of course, but also go easy on yourself.
If you can find a way to do the minimum required for a while, don't feel bad about that because
you've got this very important thing going on in in
work in life outside work. Yeah, I mean, it's always this thing about not, not making the
difficulties of being human worse by adding in this standard that you hold yourself to that actually
nobody could ever reach. I think it is liberating. I know sometimes when I put out podcasts on a particular topic,
you know, a lot of the time it's health and wellbeing. I absolutely think your book is
a health and wellbeing book as well. Interesting. And I'll get to that in just a moment. But
a lot of young parents, like, yeah, you know, they contact me and say, I can't do that.
This could be too hard, you know, at the moment. It's like, yeah, that know, they contact me and say, I can't do that. This could be too hard, you know, at the moment.
It's like, yeah, that's okay.
It's almost like embracing that.
Yeah, this is a time in your life where actually maybe you are going to be knackered and under-slept
and you can't move your body as much as you might want to,
or you might hear someone talk about on the podcast.
It's like, actually, that's okay.
Yeah.
You know, you know, take that information and just park it and go,
yeah, at the moment, that
ain't going to fit for me. But in a few months, actually, when my child's a bit older or I
have a bit of help or whatever, that may change again. And so I love that whole seasonal approach
to it. I think that's very freeing.
No, I think it is and I hope it is. And I think that it's important to say about how
to sort of receive the advice in a book like this, but also all this advice in all the
contexts that you talk to people about and your own advice that you give people, right?
I think what really matters is often more the spirit in which it's offered than whether
this specific technique needs to be integrated into your life tomorrow.
And so, yeah, absolutely, there may be somebody with a certain approach to physical fitness
who's got absolutely the right approach, but this specific set of workouts is not going
to be something you're going to have time for right now.
And so I hope that what I'm really zeroing in on in this book is this specific spirit
that says, okay, see what's real in terms of the amount of time you have
and then in terms of the limitations of control that you have over that time.
Come back down to earth in terms of what you can reasonably ask of yourself.
And then from that firm foundation, absolutely be incredibly ambitious for your work or incredibly
ambitious for your family or whatever it is you want to do or don't be if that's not your style.
But just do it from this position of being in touch with reality and not endlessly berating
yourself and beating yourself up for not being able to evade the terms and conditions of
being human.
In an interview I heard you on recently, you made the case that in your mind, a lot of
the happiest people and contented people on the planet are probably the people that we've
never heard of, which I thought was really, really interesting.
And I absolutely agree with you.
I wonder if you can speak to that.
Yeah, I mean, it's a slightly facetious point, but I think it is basically true. I mean,
let's look at the extreme here. We don't think about Hollywood, where people are the most famous
on the planet as a place of wonderfully relaxed, psychological full health. We tend to think that there's usually, I think that there is probably
something, some deep hole you are filling inside if you are sufficiently motivated to struggle for
that kind of global fame. Now, sometimes it can have positive effects. I think if you look at
great presidents and leaders in history, they too often turn out to have been struggling with very deep
psychological issues or issues in their childhood environment.
And so it's not that it always goes wrong, but I do think that that need for that level
of fame, that sort of global, global thing is very often motivated by some restless unease. My theory, based on no research
at all, is just that lower down that grade to anyone who has any kind of public profile,
I think on some level, pursuing a public profile is a sign... I don't mean to insult you here.
I have a little one too. It's like that you need some kind of, so it's, I'm talking about my own weird issues as well, but like
there's that you need something that someone who is completely living completely obscurity
doesn't need because they're actually at peace with that situation.
I completely agree with you. I think many people feel, and I include myself in this
absolutely and I'd be very open in my latest book about some of the struggles I've had in my life and that need for external validation.
And I think you're right, there's a lot of people who have huge amounts of fame and profile
who are deeply, deeply unhappy. We see this time and time again. I think that the problem
then comes, those are the people we look up to for their advice. So that person who, you know, I don't know, founded the company that, I don't even know
the term, the stock market, you know, that sold publicly or whatever for like 10 million,
we want their productivity tips.
You think, yeah, but maybe the cost of that level of success was a broken marriage and
never seen their children or whatever.
So we then apply the tips in
our own life to get something that we don't actually want.
I think that's such a good point. And I think, yeah, and the other place where this sort
of rears its head greatly is on social media, right? Because there you have this situation
where everyone who does at all well on social media has a certain public profile, right?
Well, everyone's got a profile now.
Right, exactly. Right. Maybe it's a few hundred followers, maybe it's millions of followers, but like the saying
that on the internet everyone is famous for 15 people.
And it's like, if you make a big song and dance on social media and you need validation
in that way, you will have a few thousand followers, you might go higher.
And like, yeah, somebody with zero followers is either a bot or maybe it's just
fine not to have any followers. You know, maybe it's actually not seeking that kind
of external validation.
Yeah. It says that people needing to make decisions or wanting help and advice from
Oliver Burtman, who wrote this column for week after week,
giving advice to people. In your final article, point number two was, when stumped by a life
choice, choose enlargement over happiness, which I really liked. I thought that was a
really nice way. Could you expand on what you meant by that? What does choose enlargement
mean? Yeah, this comes from Jungian psychologist James Hollis, whose work I really, really admire. And
I've had the amazing luck to then get to get to meet and talk to. And he says, yeah, if you're
facing a big choice, but I think you can use it in day to day context as well, right? Instead of
thinking or asking what is this going to make me happy? What should I do that make me happiest? Yeah, ask what would enlarge you and what would diminish you.
So what does this mean?
I think for me anyway, what it means is what we really want deep, deep down is growth.
It isn't actually necessarily hedonism.
Firstly, we're terrible at predicting what's going to make us happy, right?
That's just a very, like the oldest finding in social psychology is we think we want this and then we get it and this doesn't give us what we
wanted. But also, this question brings into focus the idea of whether happiness is quite the right
word for what we should be shooting for anyway in life. Because there are lots of contexts where
we're not actually having a happy time
in that moment, but where looking back, we know that that was a really meaningful thing
to do.
I think this question about enlargement, it really works to connect you to your intuitions
on that matter.
To give examples, in relationships, in jobs, there are all sorts of difficulties that you
encounter, all sorts of times that do not feel pleasurable and happy and fun.
But some of them might be a sign that you're in a toxic relationship or a terrible job.
Others are just kind of like part of getting better at living with a whole other adult
or doing a challenging job to achieve something worthwhile.
And that enlargement question can really help you filter
between those two. Because when you think about some difficulty you're undergoing in
one of those domains, you know if it's the kind of difficulty that is ultimately helping
you grow as a person. It's not fun, but it's like, yeah, this is challenging me in good
ways and I need to be challenged. And then I think you also know if it's just the kind
that's making your soul shrivel inside, in which case, sure, do what you can to get
out of that situation. And that's really important because otherwise you're just going to think
to yourself, well, this is unpleasant, therefore it must be wrong for me. And I've had, you
know, I've given this example before, but the one that is just so vivid to me that I
come back to it, I lived and worked in the US for
a very long time. My wife's American. There was a time very early in my time there when
I had this moment when I could have returned back to the UK or stayed out there. For me,
it was very clear when I pondered it in this way that the enlarging choice was to remain
out in the US and to not walk of walk away from all the life that
I was beginning to get embedded in there. But you could easily imagine somebody else
who was living in another country where it was like, okay, now it's time to go home and
face the music. Like now it's like the enlarging choice here is to stop sort of messing around
as an expat in another country and go and like, go and do the thing you said you wanted
to do. Maybe this is not a very good example for other people. I don't know. But like, go and do the thing you said you wanted to do. Maybe this is not a very good example for other people. I don't know. But like, it always speaks to me because it was clear
to me then that like it would have been the comfortable option to leave at that point,
but not the enlarging option. And I think that's often, that is often staying with a
situation, not always, but often staying with the situation is like
the sort of more important challenge than leaving it.
And I guess that's very individual to whoever's making that decision, isn't it? It's like,
it's impossible to say to someone else that's an enlarging choice, that is not an enlarging
choice.
Exactly, exactly.
I can't possibly know what that is for someone else. But when they ask themselves that question, I think they often have that instinct. If we allow ourselves to be quiet enough to actually tap
into our instinct, which I think is another big problem these days.
And it can work in the opposite way, right? Than the one than the example I gave. So,
someone might have the idea that their job is to tough out like an abusive relationship
or an exploitative work situation that they might have been raised
with the idea that their job is just to stick with it, come what may.
When they ask this question, they might be like, no, this is having the opposite effect
of growth on me.
That can then be an opportunity to... If your personality is of someone who does stay, if
you're not a sort of comitmophobic person, but a sort of people pleasing person in that way, that might be the spur to actually make a
big change to your life.
Yeah.
Yeah.
In that final column, I also liked, I think, point five, the future will never provide
the reassurance you seek from it.
What's that about?
This feels very personal to me. I feel like one of my sort of big, weird psychological issues going back, but like that anyone who's
a bit of a chronic warrior or a compulsive planner, and I historically would sort of
count myself in those categories for sure, is basically trying to feel like they know
that everything's going to be fine in some area and to do with the future.
Because you can't actually ever know, because we are, as someone else put it, we're vulnerable
to events.
In every moment, anything could happen.
This is a horrible thought when you think about truly horrible things happening to people
you truly love, right?
But it is true.
In every moment, in any moment, anything could happen. And I think we're always trying to sort of defend
against that psychologically. And one way we do that, or one way a certain kind of person
does that is by like worrying and fretting and planning and trying to make sure that
everything's lined up well and that it's all planned out properly and that you've left
enough time to do this and that someone else has reassured you they're going to be something.
You'll never get that certainty.
The reason you'll never get it is because the future hasn't happened yet and because
you don't know what's going to happen in the future.
If you're constantly sort of your reach is always exceeding your grasp, right?
Because you're constantly trying to reach into the future from the present to be like,
okay, can you just reassure me that this is going to be fine? And like, actually, no, you can't ever be reassured.
You can definitely take actions that make better outcomes likelier than others, right?
So definitely pursue good health and good diet and exercise.
It's going to make a massive difference to the level of probability that you can assign
to your being healthy at a later date, but
you can't know.
That sort of desire to know, I think, fuels a lot of anxiety that we don't actually need
to feel.
It is possible, not easy, I don't do it flawlessly, but it is possible to sort of surrender to
the fact that you're on this sort of whitewater
rapids ride through time that you don't get to control what's coming next.
And you can adopt this attitude on my good days anyway, of like curiosity about what's
coming next.
It's like, I wonder if my plans for today will bear any resemblance to how the day goes.
Not I need my plans for today to bear a close resemblance to how the day goes.
Just shifting the perspective to curiosity makes all the difference because then it's not about
whether you're right or wrong. It's about, oh, what a great opportunity to learn something and
just find out what happens. And why I think your book is also, as well as I think we'll go down
as a very important philosophical text, actually, I think some really quite profound ideas in there.
I think it's also got health implications because a lot of what we see as doctors
these days is related to our collective modern lifestyles, but it's not just about
things like food choices or are we moving our bodies? It's actually a lot of this kind of
stress and worry over trying to control time that's uncontrollable. So you're trying to meet this bar
that you can never meet, that you'll have work-life balance, you'll have mastery over your email
inbox. And actually the frustration when you don't have it, A, it leads to a lot of poor lifestyle choices
because that sense of frustration, that discomfort needs to be soothed in some way, whether it
be with a tub of ice cream or biscuits or booze. Or you just can't sleep because you're chronically
stressed and thinking and worrying about the future or fretting over the past. So actually really understanding
our relationship to time, learning, as you say, to surrender and knowing that you can't control it,
I actually think is very, very important for each and every single one of these days. It's
not just something that's philosophical. It's actually the fabric of our daily lives. And when
we get it wrong, it impacts every moment in our
life.
Yeah.
No, that's a really interesting point.
The ways in which we try to sort of not feel this discomfort to dull the pain of those
things.
Yeah, absolutely.
Specifically the point you just made about how they have impact on us physically because
of the sort of narcotic ways that we choose to sort of
absolutely it's huge. Yeah, no, totally. I want to finish off by talking about keeping options open.
I think and I guess I'm passionate about this because I feel for much of my life, I've not
wanting to commit to certain things like, I just want to keep my options open. What if I want to do something else that day?
Well, I don't want to like I'm not I'm not very good at
Committing to stuff in the future. In fact, if someone invites me or there's an opportunity
Two or three months in advance. I don't like it because I like well
I mean, I may be busy. I may want to do something else. Yes. You know what I mean? Oh join the club
I know I know this very well. So this is do something else. Yes, yes. Do you know what I mean? Oh, join the club.
I know this very well.
So this is, I guess, I'm looking for some wisdom from you, I think, on the problems
with keeping options open.
Well, it's only wisdom, if it is wisdom at all, that comes from having been in exactly
the same situation, wanting to do that.
I think that basically what happens when we insist on keeping our options open or refuse to commit to things is again, it's a form of feeling in more control than we
really have. So like procrastination, if you don't launch into a project, in reality, you
still get to feel in control of it. If you don't commit to relationships or to projects
or to a career or to a place where you live or something, it feels like you're holding
all the potential inside yourself. and at some later point, you
can find when you feel like it, you will make that commitment, but not now.
That again is something that is actually false simply because of the fact that we are finite
and that time just keeps elapsing whether we like it or not.
So the example I give in the book, right, or one of the examples, if you decline to get into
a long-term relationship and instead you want to spend like 10 years dating people and playing
the field, you might tell yourself as a commitment phobe that you are keeping your options open.
But in fact, you've just made a different kind of choice about how to commit to that
time.
The upside, there's an upside, which is that you don't have to encounter the difficulties
or limitations of a long-term relationship.
There's a downside, which is you don't get to enjoy the benefits of a committed long-term
relationship.
That might be the right decision for someone to take, but that time is still gone.
You've decided to use those years that we will never get again in one way rather than another way. It might be the right way for someone. I'm
not saying everyone has to get married at 18 or something. What we tend to tell ourselves
is that it isn't really committing to something. We're telling ourselves that we're holding
back from maintaining our position of power. the sands of time are running out whether we like it or not. So you're just using up those years of your life in a different way.
And the idea I'm trying to get out there is that like, you're always committing to things.
It's just that you're sometimes committing unconsciously. So then it's not that some
people might say then, well, that is not a commitment, but you are still sort of trade-offs are present, whatever you're doing.
And so, you know, if you decide to keep your options open about a career path by not sort
of giving yourself fully to one thing, again, that might be right for some people that they
want to sort of have a finger in multiple pies during their life.
But don't pretend that you're not deciding to use up a bit of your life in that way,
that you're somehow sort of, you know, real life hasn't begun yet and you're holding all
the cards.
No, real life has begun and you've decided to do that with it.
I guess before you know it, you never end up making a decision.
You can always endlessly keep your options open, but you just got a lot of options. Right. As they say, yes, exactly. Yes, you end up making a decision, you can always endlessly keep your options open, but you just got a
lot of options.
Right, as they say. Yes, exactly. Yes, you end up with nothing. I think that's true,
right? The problem is not that I'm against people having portfolio careers or something,
but that if what you want in life and you think you do want is a family or to be very,
very accomplished in one career, There's a terrible danger in telling
yourself you don't need to get involved in it just yet because you're going to sort of
keep all your options open and then that goes on and on and on and on and on. And actually
it turns out that you weren't keeping your options open really. You were just sort of,
you were using up your time in a way that was not in tune with the thing you wanted to do.
I think one of the downsides of trying to keep options open all the time, certainly
was something I felt in the past is I caused myself such mental anguish and,
uh, maybe I could, I know, but if I did that, that I, if I want to do this at
that weekend, I can't do that.
So I won't commit, and then I wouldn't even make a decision.
I just keep trying to delay that decision, but you don't measure the
fact that you're using up a considerable amount of mental energy and cognitive reserve day after day. You haven't made a decision. You're
trying to postpone the decision. So you have all the information at your fingertips so you can make
the perfect decision. I guess it's a bit like a lot of people like to book their holiday early.
They know in six months time at that week, we're going to holiday there. The flights are booked,
everything's booked. And I used to think, man, you've committed early, you know, what if there's a better
option? You guys have got it right, because actually, you made the decision, there's no
more cognitive advantage. You know what's happening. Everyone around you knows what's
happening. And there is a kind of freedom to that, isn't there?
Totally. And like I say, in the book, there's this weird phenomenon where very often people who take
decisions that they were sort of dreading feel absolutely sort of fine having made them
because it's done.
It's over.
All you can do is deal with the consequences of that choice.
So buying a house, getting married, leaving a job, all sorts of things. They less
frequently tend out to be stressful in the way that you were predicting because actually
the stress was the not deciding one way or another.
Yeah. And again, coming back to time, like we don't measure that. We don't account for
that, I don't think. We just think, oh, if we end up making that right decision, it was
worth it. But well, how many evenings did you waste not being present to your life because you
were thinking about this?
You know, and again, there's certainly something I've been guilty of in the past.
There's just so much I could keep talking to you about, Oliver.
And given that there's no watch in the studio, I don't know the time, which is the way I
like it, which is why these conversations often end up being quite long.
The podcast is called Feel Better, Live More.
When we feel better, we get more out of our lives. At the end of this conversation, at the end
of this podcast, what I often try and do is leave the audience with some actionable things
to think about in their life. Many people these days are struggling. They feel a chronic
state of overwhelm. They feel that they don't have enough time to get all the things done that they think they need to get done. And I wonder with all your kind of years of writing and
just wisdom from, you know, being immersed in this topic, do you have any kind of final
thoughts or words to share with people?
I mean, I think one way to think about this is just to sort of ask yourself how you might
do today differently if you really knew and believed that you definitely weren't going
to get all the things done that you were hoping to get done in the day.
Might you in that situation make at least a little bit of time now, today, for something that
you know you really care about rather than telling yourself that that's coming down the
pike that you're going to get all this other stuff out of the way first and then you're
going to have time for that.
I've said in the past, as a bit of a joke, but I think I mean it, that the only sort
of time management technique worth its salt is is step one, choose something that you
know matters to you.
Step two, figure out when today or this week you're going to give it at least 20 minutes
of your time.
And then there is no step three because yes, some other things are not going to get done
and that was always the case.
And only this time you will have spent some time nurturing that relationship that matters to you or
starting to write that screenplay you've been thinking about for a decade or
million other things. But like, I think people know more than they always necessarily realize they
know what matters to them. And it really ultimately is just a matter of making a little bit of
time for those things here and now.
I love that. There's no step three. Brilliant way to end the conversation. Thanks for coming
to the studio. Thank you for writing a truly wonderful book, 4000 Weeks. And I hope we
get to do this again at some point.
Thank you so much, Ronan. I've really enjoyed it.
Really hope you enjoyed that conversation. Do think about one thing that you can take away
and apply into your own life. And also have a think about one thing from this conversation that you can teach to somebody else. Remember, when you teach someone, it not only helps them, it
also helps you learn and retain the information.
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