Doug Wilson on Time Management
Pastor Wilson’s productivity has always amazed me. Being a pastor is a full time job. Yet he finds time to blog, write books, and handle critics. He recently gave a little hint of how he does it in his post The Fruitfulness of Plodding.
I believe in plodding. Productivity is more a matter of diligent, long-distance hiking than it is one-hundred-yard dashing. Doing a little bit now is far better than hoping to do a lot on the morrow. So redeem the fifteen minute spaces. Chip away at it. For example, I have a stack of six books that I am working through most weekday mornings — a page or two of each every time I sit down to read. I do the same thing with writing — if you have time for a little bit, then do a little bit.
and our excuses of not having enough time is really a matter of priorities.
A sixty hour work week is an honest job and a significant load, but a lot of the problems that come to people who work this much happen because of where those sixty hours are placed. It is possible to work sixty hours and still have lots of time left over for family. A week has a total of 168 hours in it. Sixty hours of work leaves 108, and eight hours of sleep a night take away another 56 hours, leaving you with 52 hours a week to play tag with the kids.
Now what is my excuse?







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