People Make Time for What They Want — Rightfully So

People Make Time for What They Want — Rightfully So

People make time for what they want, and we should aspire to that.

“People make time for what they want to make time for.”

Though the author is unknown, this saying has become an axiom to soothe distraught thoughts.

Some use it as reasoning to understand why another person isn’t making time for them. Maybe they’re “just not that into you,” according to this video from?Sex and the City. Why aren’t they calling texting or replying?

For others, it’s become a mantra to kick-start the mindset shift they need to make difficult yet necessary decisions that protect their time—which usually means letting go of some activities and people to reserve space for others.

It’s a valid justification.

Time is precious. We only have so much of it. We must be careful about who and what we give it to. Still, that can be a challenge. Every day, we face people and activities that try to steal our time.

Here’s how to make sure you spend time on what you want.


Smart People Make Time for What’s Important to Them

It’s not wise to waste your time and attention—they are?scarce commodities.

When we let someone steal our time and attention with?distraction, we’re paying with a non-refundable, nonrenewable resource.

If we’re to spend our time how we want to,?we have to see distraction for the thief it is. And we have to start valuing our time and managing it as carefully as we do our money.

Indistractable?people already do this.

These people make time for what they want by setting boundaries.

And they don’t feel guilty about being stingy with their time—because to surrender control of their time is to surrender how they want to live their life and what type of person they want to become.

Time is precious. We only have so much of it. We must be careful about who and what we give it to.?Click To Tweet


People Make Time for Who They Want in Their Life

Just as important as limiting what we allow in our life is limiting who we allow in our life.

The company we keep has a massive influence on our behavior, driving us either to distraction or to?its opposite, traction, which is any action we do with intent.

It’s essential to make time only for people who enable us to pursue traction. That means focusing on?quality relationships over quantity.

Ensuring the values of the people in your life?don’t conflict with your own?is critical to picking quality relationships. But we also must pick friends with as much interest and time to put into the relationship as we do.

If you find yourself putting a lot of effort into a one-sided relationship, let it go. People make time for who they want to make time for. Likewise, you should make time only for people who make time for you.

You deserve people who actively include you in their life and enrich yours.


Follow These Steps to Control Your Time

People make time for what they want by making a conscious effort to control their time and attention.

That begins with identifying the?values?they want to live by. Intimacy, selflessness, and determination are all values, or characteristics of the people we want to become.

Once we know our values and the activities that facilitate them, we can turn them into time by adding them to a?timeboxed calendar. Exercise might be scheduled for Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m.; leisure reading every night for 30 minutes; family dinners every weeknight from 6:30 to 8 p.m.

With this timeboxed calendar in hand, we can live the life we really want. Anything that drags our attention away from the timeboxed calendar we created for ourselves—be it social media, an unhealthy relationship, or a micromanaging boss—is a distraction.

You can get other people in your life on board with your timeboxed calendar by?schedule-syncing?with them. For example, share your hours for focused work with your boss and coworkers, so they know when not to bombard you with emails, meetings, or Slack messages.

It’s 100 percent within your right to make time for what you want.

Start exercising control at work by?setting boundaries to facilitate a work-life balance. Start exercising control over your personal life by letting go of people and activities that no longer support the life you want.

These are the things you need to do to make time for who you want to be.


  • Nir


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Nir Eyal is formerly a Lecturer in Marketing at Stanford's Graduate School of Business. His first book, Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products, is an international bestseller and taught companies how to design more engaging products. His second book, Indistractable: How to Control Your Attention and Choose Your Life, reveals

GraceLand Diabetes Foundation

Graceland diabetes foundation

2 年

Thanks for posting

Germaine Phua

Rep No: PSY300031090 | Credence is a group of financial consultants representing Great Eastern Financial Advisers Pte Ltd | Associate Director | MDRT Qualifier | IDA Bronze | GELAC Qualifier | Loves Tennis and Travelling

2 年

It's a reminder that if we truly want to achieve something, we need to make it a priority and make time for it.

Darshak Rana

?? Follow for daily frameworks on high-performance living, and productivity

2 年

We are creatures of habit, spending our days doing the thing that we are good at. And the thing we are good at represents our skills and strengths. That's great. But we need to ask ourselves if this represents what we want to do for the rest of our lives. If not, perhaps we need to ask ourselves whether this is something we really want to be doing for the rest of our lives?

Paris P.

Manager, Advanced Analytics @ Walmart | Data Professional | Product Enthusiast

2 年

Very true! When one knows what they want to make time for and implement it, they can keep negative energies at bay. I believe this also helps foster deeper and more meaningful relationships with people around you while also ensuring your personal development.

Dan LeFave

Founder, 10x Operating System | Data-Driven Coaching for Simplified Scaling & Strategic Growth | Empowering CEOs and Dentists | 2x Author

2 年

Eye opening article! Seems like time is our greatest asset and we spend it with our attention.

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