Time

12/2010

With Thanksgiving becoming a distant memory and Christmas having come and gone, we stand at the threshold of a new year.  It’s hard to believe we are about to let 2011 slip into the record books.  Wasn’t it just a few months back that we were saying goodbye to 2010?  Time is a squirmy little concept.  Years seem to fly by.  You close your eyes and it seems your kids have grown and flown from the nest.   On the other hand, yet you stand in line at the checkout counter and your patience can find itself stretched to capacity in a mere matter of minutes.  Crazy how it works, isn’t it?

Think about it.  You start off the work week; get bogged down in the stress and find yourself wishing time would slip into high gear and bring those days off flying around the corner.  You hit the weekend and you’re putting on the brakes trying to slow the clock down so you can have just a little more time!  You wake up an hour before the alarm clock goes off, glance at the time before drifting back off to sleep and it seems that last hour just wasn’t enough.  You sit in the waiting room of the doctor’s office watching the second hand tick tortuously around in a circle and that hour seems like an eternity.

How can a single measurement of time cause so many different reactions? 

I’ve talked about time in many different ways in the blog articles.  I guess it’s just something which intrigues me.  I’ve talked about trading time to our employers for money and sharing time with family and friends; time as a commodity.  The thing is none of us really know how much time we have, so we simply don’t know how valuable it is.  When something is in short supply, the value goes up; like a shortage of fuel or a limited collector’s item.  If we really knew how much time we had, we would probably be spending it on the things which we valued the most.

We’re at the beginning of another school year.  Wow!  Those kids have no idea how fast their time will pass them by.  Most of them live with the idea that they have plenty of time ahead of them.  Parents will be talking about managing their time so they have enough time for school work.  They will need to balance the amount of time they devote to sports, friends, and work.  Above all else, how do we teach them that their time is valuable and limited?

Of course, their carefree spirits towards time and life in general will allow them to live life more fully.  They’ll take more risks than we’d like them to take.  They’ll see life as an adventure and an experience to be savored.  In short, many of them will want to use their time for fun and we want them to enjoy being kids. One day, however, they may find themselves wishing for time to slow down so that they can do all they wanted to do.  They will hope for enough time to spend with the people they care most about.  And, they’ll stare at that clock on the office wall hoping for time to speed up so they can get off work and have time to themselves.  They will see their own kids wasting their time and they’ll encourage them to use it more wisely.

Time Is A Commodity

2012

I’ve had this thought on my mind for a while now.  Recent events have tweaked and twisted it, but still it remains. Time is a commodity.  It is something of value.  It is something with which we barter.  It is something we trade, sell, or donate.  In looking back at my first blog of the year, I find this is a bit of a continuation of that theme.

You know, all books and all authors have some theme or meaning lying underneath the surface of the words.  Themes can deal with nearly anything – internal conflicts, external conflicts, personal value, search for happiness/contentment, etc.  You follow me on this I’m sure.  In my book, Loving Deacon, the theme focuses on personal value.  Deacon has found happiness in his wife and his family, but what he is missing is his personal satisfaction with who he is and the purpose his life has served.  In Whispers in the Wind, Abby thinks she has found happiness by following her dreams, only to find true happiness somewhere else.  The Ladder Climber is yet to be published, but its theme deals with finding the right balance to life and work.  The Blemished Rose, which also has not yet been published, deals with misplaced guilt.

One underlying theme in each of these novels is time.  In every instance, time plays a major role because life is much about time and how we use it.  Time is a commodity.  We trade time to our employer for pay.  We put in a certain amount of time on the job and they give us a certain amount of money for that time.  Of course, when it comes to how much money we are able to get for that time other factors come into play, such as technical skills, experience, and the difficulty of the task.  This particular blog article isn’t about discussing the fairness of the trade, a discussion which could go on and on, but rather the fact that time is something which is limited and valuable.

Although much of our time is necessarily devoted to work or earning a living, we chose how we use our time.  We try to portion our time so we can keep at least some of it for ourselves and our families.  Some people save enough time to golf, fish, read, watch movies, or whatever makes them happy.  Parents save time to go watch their kids play sports or attend a Christmas concert.  Families look forward to taking time for vacations.  People donate time to charities.

Perhaps if we knew just how much time we had, we would prioritize it better, but the truth is we don’t.  When we are young life seems almost endless and we find ourselves believing we have plenty of time.  We take more risks, we live carefree, and time appears to be on our side.  And yet, plenty of young people never see their eighteenth birthday; they just didn’t have much time.  As we grow older and people pass from among us, the limits of our time start to become more real.

Based upon my core beliefs, I believe there is a purpose to the amount of time we are given; a purpose for life and a certain amount of time in which to accomplish it.  Deacon says we are like dominoes and each of us impacts the other.  Therefore, my purpose could lead you to your purpose or vice versa.  The ripples of your life may flow into mine.  Even a life which seems cut short may have been just long enough to help shape another life or provide the catalyst necessary for another to find their purpose.  These are my thoughts and you’re welcome to your own, of course.

I must admit, much of mine is wasted on things with little importance.  So much time is spent worrying about things which really don’t matter in the grand scheme of life.  These things become a distraction, sucking away time which could be better served if focused upon things of value.  Such squandering of time is much akin to the accumulation of things; things which will waste and wither away; things which simply aren’t needed in order to live happy and comfortably.

What about you?  What’s your purpose?  Are you to do something which catches worldwide attention changing the course of history?  Maybe you’re doing something just as important by changing someone else’s history; nurturing children who will shape the world in which they live.  Perhaps your life was meant to rub up against someone else who has a completely different purpose.  Will you look back on your time and find it was used wisely or squandered on a pot full of irrelevance?  We probably all have things in our lives which are well worth the time as well as things which aren’t worth a minute and though I don’t think it is healthy to question ourselves on every second of our time, I do think it is healthy to realize that life is largely about how we spend our time.

Make the most of it my friends.  Hug those grand-kids.  Kiss your own kids.  Stop and smell the roses.  Take the time to offer roses.  Write a book.  Read a book.  Plant a tree.  Give some blood.  Visit with someone.  Spend some time alone.  Just use it for what is important to you and to those you care about.

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