Upstream - Reclaiming Time with Oliver Burkeman
Episode Date: April 25, 2023At the beginning of the 20th century, economist John Maynard Keynes predicted that within a century, thanks to the growth of wealth and the advances of technology, that no one would have to work mo...re than 15 hours a week. The challenge, in Keynes's view, would be how to fill all of our newfound leisure time without going crazy.’ That obviously never happened — so, what went wrong? Technology has advanced to the point where we could all be working much less, and with all sorts of time-management apps and tips from experts, why does it somehow feel like there’s never enough time in the day? In this episode, we’ve brought on someone who might help us figure that out. Oliver Burkeman is the author of 4000 Weeks: Time Management for Mortals — a book about why life today often feels like a battle against endless to-do lists. In this conversation, we explore with Oliver how time has been instrumentalized under capitalism, why it’s important to “waste time” on activities that are not productive and cultivate the feeling of a “joy of missing out” as opposed to FOMO, the “fear of missing out,” and how to connect with what is truly most important to us right now and full-heartedly embrace our finite time, our mere 4000 precious weeks, on planet earth. Thank you to The Weakerthans for the intermission music and to Carolyn Raider for the cover art. Upstream's theme music was composed by Robert Raymond. This episode of Upstream was made possible with support from listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love — we couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at www.upstreampodcast.org/support If your organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming documentaries, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org/sponsorship For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org and follow us on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Bluesky. You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.
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Thank you. The nature of capitalism and consumerism at first glance
is a system that is fueled by people seeking the next horizon,
seeking growth in a certain sense as the sole variable,
seeking to sort of gain a kind of foothold.
And other people have talked about capitalism as an economic system
that sort of instrumentalizes everything it comes into contact with,
that this sort of instrumentalism is the core of it.
It's like, how can this be used for goals of the system,
natural resources, people's energy and ingenuity and skills,
all the rest of it, and obviously also time, right?
I mean, this idea that your time itself is a commodity
is a big part of this,
because then it becomes absolutely part of the same logic
to try to squeeze as much value out of every minute, every hour.
You're listening to Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
A podcast of documentaries and conversations that invites you to unlearn everything you
thought you knew about economics. I'm Robert Raymond.
And I'm Della Duncan.
At the beginning of the 20th century, economist John Maynard Keynes predicted that within a century,
thanks to the growth of wealth and the advances of technology,
that no one would have to work more than 15 hours a week.
The challenge, in Keynes' view, was actually how we would fill all of our newfound leisure time without going crazy.
That obviously never happened, so what went wrong?
Technology has advanced to the point where we could all be working much less,
and with all sorts of time management apps and tips from experts,
why does it somehow feel like there's never enough time in the day?
Why does it somehow feel like there's never enough time in the day?
Well, in this episode, we've brought on someone who might just be able to help us figure that out.
Oliver Berkman is the author of 4,000 Weeks, Time Management for Mortals, a book about why life today often feels like a battle against endless to-do lists.
In this conversation, we explore with Oliver how
time has been instrumentalized under capitalism, why it's important to, quote, waste time on
activities that are not productive, and cultivate the feeling of a joy of missing out as opposed to
the fear of missing out, and how to connect with what is truly most important to us right
now and full-heartedly embrace our finite time, our mere 4,000 precious weeks on planet
Earth.
Here's Della in conversation with Oliver Berkman. we would love to start with an introduction how might you introduce yourself for our listeners
my name is oliver berkman i am an author and journalist, I suppose. I most recently wrote a book called
4,000 Weeks Time Management for Mortals, and I've written some other books. And I wrote a column for
the Guardian newspaper for a long time about sort of psychology and philosophy and self-help and
happiness and all that stuff. I wrapped that up a couple of years ago. I live in Yorkshire.
I feel like I could now go on for an hour and a half,
but that's not the point. So yeah, I'll stop there with the bio.
Thank you. And so the theme of this show is about going upstream from the challenges of our time,
the ecological, the social, the political, the economic, and going to the root causes.
the political, the economic, and going to the root causes. And your book, 4,000 Weeks, is absolutely a journey upstream. And let's start with what are the challenges or the heartbreaks or
the things that you journeyed upstream from? Like, what were the seeds of inspiration that
wanted you to embark on this book? And what were the challenges,
political, economic, social, ecological, that your book is really an upstream journey from?
Such a great question. And it's such a great sort of frame in general, metaphor, whatever it is,
the idea of going upstream. I suppose one way to answer that is that I feel like in some way,
I'm always in my writing, just trying to figure out ways to deal with is that I feel like in some way I'm always in my writing just trying to figure
out ways to deal with the struggles I have in a fairly self-absorbed and personal way and then
hopefully working up to something more widely applicable and deeper and I had always had a
sort of a fixation with this idea of managing my time feeling in control or rather not feeling in control
of my time and wanting to feel in control feeling that there must be some way of you know organizing
things and handling work and the rest of life in such a way that i could do everything that was
demanded of me and pursue all my ambitions and fulfill my potential, whatever that means. And so that's sort of the
ground level of this was, you know, being what I call in the book, you know, productivity geek
and what that meant and what drives people who are really fixated on productivity in that way.
But what I came to see, I guess, is that it's that is one version of many ways in
which people struggle with the sort of, to confront and acknowledge the facts, what it means to be a
finite human with finite time. It's definitely one where there are all sorts of social and economic
cultural pressures making it making it worse and um but i guess where that
led me eventually is you know as upstream as perhaps you can go which is just death and the
difficulties we have with the situation in which we find ourselves you know governed by limits and
subject to forces beyond our control and and uh unable on principle to do even a fraction of the things that might feel like they matter
just because that's what it means to be a finite human.
Obviously for many, many people, all these challenges of time really do feel very political, economic.
You know, they are to do with feeling like the world is making impossible demands on them just to stay afloat.
I think a lot of my impossible demands
probably came from inside me in my case, but it's all part of the same. It's all part of the same
challenge, I guess. Yeah, I really heard you say that, you know, one approach to your writing is
to explore the questions or challenges that you're facing. And then it sounds like it led to more
systemic or more collective challenges around time and
productivity. And yeah, I would say for me reading the book, there were a few
heartbreaks or challenges that your book went upstream from that I didn't even know I had,
meaning the ways that I instrumentalized time, that I tried to make everything productive,
even my leisure time. Also, my sense of deferral of happiness or contentedness
until a future state. I didn't realize that I have that as well, as well as a sense of urgency
or a pressure to really have meaning that might be a little out of proportion in the grand scheme
of things. So just to add a few more that I like,
those are challenges that I didn't even know I was experiencing that were having a toll on me
that your book really went upstream from. Yeah, no, I think that's great to hear. And I mean,
it's not great to hear that you that you suffer like the rest of us. But you know what I mean?
It's great to hear that it resonated. I think that, yeah, that sense that the real meaning of life is going to come at some point
in the future, which is so easy to sort of credit if you're maybe 18 or 19 and progressively
gets harder and harder to believe in as you get further and further through the life journey
is a really big part of this.
And I think that, you know, we can talk more about it if you like but what's that's really bound up with this
awful but in some ways poignant and beautiful truth that loss and turning and waving goodbye
to opportunities and and endings and all of this are absolutely baked in to our situation and to you know the very best life
imaginable is nonetheless you know it's completely shot through with all the things we can't do all
the lives unlived all the decisions we have to make to not spend our time on most things in order
to spend them on a few things that that matter to us i think one of the functions that that sort of
deferral serves that sort of one day i'm gonna get it together i'm gonna be fully qualified or
i'm gonna have get myself fully organized or you're just you know one day the time of meaning
and joy and pleasure is going to come it's really sort of useful in an avoidant way because it helps us to keep on thinking that we're going to win this struggle against our limits and against loss, you know, but just not yet.
As long as it's going to happen soon, you can sort of keep on believing in it.
Yeah.
I'm reminded of the one way that you described what you're saying in your book is the joy of missing out.
People may have heard of FOMO, the fear of missing out, is the joy of missing out. People may have heard of FOMO, the fear of
missing out, but the joy of missing out, you describe as coming when we decide on something,
when we commit to something, when we land on something. And a friend of mine just sent me
this article of a 35-year-old who just had flitted between jobs and all sorts of locations and was
really searching for meaning and really not finding it and and all sorts of locations and was really searching for meaning
and really not finding it and having a sense of anxiety and overwhelm and depression. And I
recalled what you shared and this idea of like, you know, if we choose, let's just say a place to
live, it may be that there are many other places out there that could be warmer, more walkable, you know, an even better
Thai restaurant. And yet that commitment, that landing, that setting our bags down, that putting
roots in can be the starting place for really deepening of our connections with place, with
the planet, with communities, with our work in the world. So yeah, I loved your reframe of the joy
of missing out that comes with a commitment to people and places and relationships.
Yeah, I think it's a lovely way of putting it. I mean, it reminds me as well that so much of what
I think I'm saying, and also much of what I find useful in other people's writing and speaking is it's never really a matter of thinking of a new way to live or a new method to use in your day-to-day life.
It's rather a kind of new degree of seeing what is already true and a new way of relating more authentically to things that were already the case.
So, you know, the shift from the fear of missing out to the joy of missing out is not necessarily about doing less in your life. In some contexts, I think it could be about doing
more. It's just about moving from this unreal fantasy notion that it might be possible to avoid
missing out and moving, shifting to the mindset and the state of understanding that you're always
missing out anyway, when you decide to commit some time to something, the state of understanding that you're always missing out anyway when you decide to
commit some time to something the nature of that commitment and the value of that commitment comes
at least in part from all the things that you're declining to do in favor of it and the only choice
we have as humans is to dive into that realization or do everything we can to avoid confronting it
and that shift even if you only go some of the way i'm sure i've only gone
some of the way from living in denial to living in sort of an authentic understanding of how things
are does bring with it a kind of poignancy there's a kind of bittersweet really sort of deep and
lovely richness that comes from acknowledging that what really gives the value to the fact
that you decide to spend a couple of hours with a certain friend, say, is in part the fact that you could have done all
these other things. They would have been valuable and you're not doing them.
The joy of facing our finitude, as you write. And, you know, let's go back to what are the
barriers? Why is it that we're not all living with death on our shoulder, which is a phrase I've heard, or facing our
finitude or accepting or, you know, resting into the joy of missing out. One of the economic things
that you bring up that I really appreciated was you, you said that John Maynard Keynes said,
and this was like at the early part of the 1900s. He said, within a century, thanks to the growth of wealth and the advance of technology,
no one will have to work more than 15 hours per week. And the challenge will be how to fill all
our newfound leisure time without going crazy. So I wonder how many folks listening are like,
oh, yeah, we're there. I only have 15 hours of work a week and my challenge is what to do with
all my leisure time. And instead you write, work seeps through life like water, filling every
cranny with more to-dos. So talk to us about how do we approach work both in terms of the systemic
and the individual? How do we approach work in a way that makes this a barrier
to facing our finitude or to really accepting the mortality of our lives?
Yeah, interesting.
Just in case there are, you know, economic historians in the audience,
I have to say that the lines you read,
Trudy Duquesne's there, I'm me paraphrasing him,
but he does say that.
He does make that claim about the 15 hour work week he says some other
very wise things in that speech that essay that i quote elsewhere as well but but that really didn't
pan out and the barriers it's interesting to think about whether work presents barriers to
our doing this or whether the way we approach work is a kind of symptom of our abhorrence
of doing it and i just mean that the sort of the causal directions here
i think you can talk about forever on the one hand we are certainly encouraged by the culture
extremely competitive and individualizing especially the sort of gig economy the collapse
of the job for life and paternalistic corporations things that, all of those forces make us feel like we have to do
an impossible amount just to stay afloat. And it may be in some sense true in that, you know,
I don't mean it's all in our heads. I don't mean there aren't people who absolutely have to work
crushing numbers of hours just to put food on the table, keep a roof above their heads. That is true.
numbers of hours just to put food on the table, keep a roof above their heads, that is true.
But it all contributes to a sort of force that keeps us from facing the fact that actually an impossible demand is an impossible one to fulfill by definition, and that we're all going to fail
to do the impossible, even if it has terrible consequences for us. On the other hand, I think
a lot of us
those of us with some modicum of autonomy and freedom in this system and privilege whatever
we embrace this right we we sort of enthusiastically jump on the on the bandwagon
and feel that by becoming ever more efficient and increasing our capacities and optimizing
and being able to take on more and more and more and process it more and more effectively we will get to this point where we
can finally feel at peace with time we can finally feel like we've won the battle we've got the upper
hand and uh you know it's all smooth sailing from from now on so it's an interesting combination of
sort of forces that pressure us and ways in
which we totally collaborate with those forces. And it's an interesting combination too, I think,
of the darker sides of capitalism as against like, well, what causes capitalism? That's always a
fascinating question to me. And I think on some level you can trace all of this back to, you know,
people not wanting to die. Me too, by the to, you know, people not wanting to die. Me too,
by the way, when it comes to not wanting to die. So I think that there's just so much going on here
in every direction. Yeah, one thing that I've come to realize is I've like gone on this upstream
journey is there is kind of a little bit of a challenge with causality, like the upstream
metaphor really is like, there's this and then then we go upstream from that, and that causes that. And, and actually, I've heard, you know, causality is more like a ball
of yarn, you know, that there, these things are very related and connected and affect one another.
So I hear you on the tangledness of the the answer to the question.
I was just gonna say, as a, as a writer, it's become clear to me that,
certainly in the kind of writing I'm doing, you don't need to answer that question.
It's not the most useful thing you can do necessarily to line up the causal order.
It's more a matter of sort of trying to vividly reflect back to people like this is how it is.
And if you think about it, you'll see that these are some of the consequences of how it is.
if you think about it, you'll see that these are some of the consequences of how it is.
So I have to say, I've sort of given myself a bit of a free pass on trying to conclude whether capitalism causes us to fear death or the fear of death causes capitalism and all the many other
questions of that form. For someone listening who that might not be very clear, that connection for,
can you explain what you mean? How is capitalism and our fear of death how are they connected well i think that this is all very impressionistic i don't have you know data and
studies but but it seems that there is this fundamental desire to i'm sort of semi-quoting
the therapist bruce tift here to not fully consciously participate in what it feels like, to be constrained by reality in all
the ways that we are, to only have a certain amount of time to know that it's coming to an
end, to not know when it's going to come to an end, to only be able to control it to an incredibly
modest degree. All of these things are sort of a situation in which we don't want to be.
situation in which we don't want to be and just sort of the nature of capitalism and consumerism at first glance is a system that is fueled by people seeking the next horizon seeking growth
in a certain sense as the sole variable seeking to sort of gain a kind of foothold sometimes in the worst forms you know
at the expense of other people depending on how marxist you want your analysis of it to be i
suppose and it seems obvious to me that all of that all of our participation in this to any degree
really fulfills this function of encouraging the feeling that we're sort of getting on top of life
or that we're getting a foothold on things if you're in any of the sort of winning positions in a capitalist
system. And if you're in one of the sort of losing positions, then I suppose it's more a matter of
feeling that you've got to do all these things in order not to slide off the bottom completely.
But it's not just survival, it's this existential level of like,
well, if I can do this, I can get to this point where I can feel secure, I can feel peace of mind
in a way that doesn't involve turning to stare reality in the face. And other people have talked
about capitalism as an economic system that sort of instrumentalizes everything it comes into
contact with, that this sort of instrumentalism is the core of it it's like
how can this be used for goals of the system natural resources people's energy and ingenuity
and skills all the rest of it and obviously also time right i mean in the post-industrial era
certainly and the industrial from the industrial era onwards, I should say,
this idea that your time itself is a commodity is a big part of this, because then it becomes
absolutely part of the same logic to try to squeeze as much value out of every minute,
every hour, I think. I don't know. What do you think? You may have more cogent thoughts about
this than I do. No i i really hear you about the
the both and that there is the systemic there's the capitalism and you write capitalism is a giant
machine for instrumentalizing everything it encounters right the earth's resources your
time your abilities so there is this systemic pressure of the instrumentalization and then
there's also the ways in which we are complicit, and that we
embody capitalism and that we instrumentalize our time, and we may be avoiding facing our finitude.
So I think it's a both and and it's understandable that if we live within the system and we're
socialized within it, that we may embody or be complicit in its operating principles. So I hear that both and. And yeah, maybe can you just
talk a little bit about that history of time? Because I think that's helpful to place it in the
history of capitalism. You have this beautiful section around looking at clocks and our
perception of time and how we've come to the relationship with time that we're in now, this more instrumentalization
of time. So what did you learn about the history of clocks and time and how we use time as a means
to an end? So this is broad brush, certainly, but I think that in general terms, pre-industrial
people did not have this basic sort of duality between you know you and time
so that you have a relationship to time time is some sort of thing that you have to maximize a
resource you have to use i make the case in the book drawing on a number of sources that i think
it can only ever be a speculative case but it is it is the case that um you know an early medieval
peasant in england say to pick
one example who contrary to some memes that go around on the internet today i do not think had
a better life in general than many of us today but who almost certainly did not suffer from time
problems many other problems but not time problems because they all seem to stem from this notion of time as a resource that
has to be maximized. And I think that before the development of that idea, which went sort of hand
in glove with the development of clocks and mechanical ways of representing the time,
would have felt much more like time would just have been the medium in which your life unfolded.
like time would just have been the medium in which your life unfolded. It just was your life rather than something that you had and that your life was spent relating to in a certain way. It just
would have been your life. And I think part of the reason it's difficult for us to see this today is
that we do have these moments of timelessness and sort of stepping off the clock, but they tend to
be sort of heightened moments that we generally think of as very beautiful moments, or perhaps occasionally
really, really awful moments. It happens, I think, in crises as well. So, you know,
I've got experiences on a meditation retreat or in a beautiful natural setting of feeling that
timelessness. I'm sort of trying to argue in the book that that quality would have
been present for sort of pre-clock people and pre-objective ideas of time people all the time.
Doesn't mean that it would have been beautiful and wonderful to suffer all the many diseases
of medieval peasant or do the back-breaking labor or have the early mortality or all these things.
But that sense that you're living your life with a yardstick or a ticking
clock in the background you're trying to keep up with something you're trying not to waste time
or get the most out of time i think that would not have been there i think though it's always
very dubious i acknowledge to to make comparisons between earlier phases of people in what are now
industrialized countries and indigenous peoples today i think there are cultures where this idea of what anthropologists call task orientation instead of time orientation
is still really prevalent where there is a sort of rhythm that comes from the activities that are
done in the day rather than first of all coming from a schedule you know you're sort of fitting
your activities into a temporal plan and yeah yeah, clocks, I mean, I think clocks, which,
at least according to some accounts, developed first in sort of monasteries that needed to
keep all the monks on the same schedule through the day. And then obviously, much later,
with industrialization, factory shifts, and all the rest of it, there's this need for a collective,
coordinated, synchronized kind of time. And that obviously fuels this objectified or i don't know this kind of
notion of time that is something separate from you that we can all see by looking at the clock
thank you for that yes and especially that task orientation versus time orientation
and i'm recalling a visit that i had to a bakery in my neighborhood. And the woman
was behind the counter and she was, you know, making coffee and getting the pastries for folks.
And she asked me if I wanted something heated. And of course, you know, you want a chocolate
croissant heated. And she was going very slowly or very naturally, let's say. And there was a little bit of a line behind me,
and I felt rushed. I felt stressed. And I remember she saw that in me, and she said,
I don't rush anymore. It's not worth it. So just this sense I'm feeling and remembering from your
book of if we let things take the time they take, and if we were more focused on the task at hand rather
than the time, you know, would we feel less of a sense of rush? It's a question. I'm wondering
what you learned about rush or how your relationship with rush has changed in the
writing of this book. Yeah, I'll happily speak to that. Your anecdote reminds me of one of mine that suggests that I haven't changed enough yet. But I've noticed that, you know,
here in the UK in supermarkets, it's different in most of America, I think. But here in the UK,
when you go through the checkout with a large, you know, weekly grocery shop, you pack it away
yourself rather than the person operating the checkout packing it away for you.
And so the situation is set up where like the shopping comes at you and it's going pretty fast
because the checkout person is pretty efficient at their job. And there's this kind of crazy notion
that you've got to get it all into the bags as it comes and not allow it to pile up. Or at least
I'm aware of feeling that stress even when the person in the
checkout is under no hurry because they're on a shift they just they're doing their job until
it's time to go home and there's no queue behind you that's the crazy thing i noticed the other
day there is still from somewhere from somewhere supernatural or rather cultural and maybe economic
you know there is this strange pressure to just get it done fast and it doesn't come from any rush that i'm And it doesn't come from any rush that I'm in.
It doesn't come from any rush that the checkout person is in.
And it doesn't come from any rush that other shoppers are in.
It just is in the air.
It's really strange.
But I think that, yeah, if you sort of trace that back or upstream, if I can use that,
that part of the reason for this hurry is that making things go faster trying to get things to
go as fast as we feel we need them to go is clearly one obvious way to try to not feel limited
by time it's not pleasant because rushing in this sense is not pleasant but it feels like whether
you sort of are consciously aware of this thought or not, it feels like if you could only go fast enough, then you could get it all done. And it would feel like you were in some sort of
position of control over the unfolding time of your life if you could decide how quickly everything
happened. And we can't, but I think a number factors in the the modern world make it harder partly by
sort of getting us closer to that goal right so i think that again i'm not sure i can prove this
but i think that impatience and that sort of stressful suffering kind of hurry where it's like
it's really awful that things can't be made to go faster. That comes to us in traffic jams or, as I say in the book, waiting for food in the microwave.
It's weirdly worse to wait three minutes for some food that's in the microwave than a couple of hours for some food that you've put in the oven.
And I think that's because our technology sort of gets us really close.
us really close. It holds out this promise that we can get faster and faster and faster doing things and maybe reach this kind of escape velocity where we are not constrained by the
natural world or by the rhythms of the social world, right? Where we just call the shots.
But of course, we still don't get there. So that remaining two minutes that it does take to heat
something up in the microwave, you can't do it in zero seconds,
is all the more tormenting. Or to pick a different kind of example that the writer,
law professor Tim Wu wrote about a while back, we're much less tolerant of waiting in traffic,
or he said in his example, waiting in line to vote, which is not something we end up having to
do in the UK, but I know it does happen a lot in the US. It's much worse to do that
if you never have to do it anymore to buy concert tickets
because you just do it on your phone.
The parts of life that remain the kind
that need to be given the time they take,
queuing for things, reading a novel,
got to be harder to do in a world
that is totally full of all these things
that don't take any time at all.
You're listening to an Upstream Conversation with Oliver Berkman,
author of 4,000 Weeks, Time Management for Mortals.
We'll be right back.
Hell like water in your shaking hands
Are all the small defeats that day demands
Ten to six or nine to 6 to 9 to 5
Trying dying to survive
Never knowing what survival means
Leave the apartment to buy alcohol
Hung our diplomas on the bathroom wall
Look at the plaster chipped away
Space is stunning to decay
List Academy and pending class war
Play our bad day down here, dear
Let's make believe we're strong
Now come some protests
Some, like maybe we shall
Overcome someday
Overcome the stupid
Things we say
Say I needed more
Miss, say I needed
One more kiss
Left that light on way too
Long now Let's plan to bomb More kiss left out, I don't wait too long now
Let's plan to bomb at City Hall
Let's kill an MLA
We'll talk the night away
You're coming sick, I'll quit the word games that I play
Swear I weigh more than half, believe it when I say
That somewhere love and justice shine
Sin of sin's a false slave
Tyranny talks to the devil
Sad these slogans all come true We forget to feed our ears.
That was Confessions of a Futon Revolutionist by The Weaker Thans.
Now, back to our conversation with Oliver Berkman.
You know, this feeling of speeding through things, this also reminds me and brings me back to the instrumentalization of time that, you know, if I were to cook a meal to eat, like the instrumentalization of that time, I might try to do it as quickly as possible, kind
of get it done.
Yeah.
And yet if I were to do it for the intrinsic value of the activity itself, I might savor
and enjoy the experience.
So let's go back to this instrumentalizing time,
because I really do think that was one of the most powerful pieces. So to instrumentalize time,
to treat time instrumentally as a means to an end. Why do we do this, Oliver? And even our leisure
time, talk to us about this. Why do we do this? And what does it look like? What are the ways that
you find that we do this? So yeah, in general, what I mean by this phrase is just literally valuing the time
that you are experiencing now solely
or pretty much solely in terms of where it is taking you
or failing to take you,
what you're doing with it that will be valuable later on.
And, you know, as I write in the book,
it's not like you can avoid this
or would want to avoid this.
We all do things for those later goals you do not record a podcast to just stop and
never do anything with the recording you do it to put out a podcast and there are thousands of
examples of this in everybody's life every day but this sort of total investment that all the
real meaning is coming later keeps you in this kind of it's like being you know donkey being led along
by a carrot or something right you never get to the moment where it cashes out to use a sort of
slightly capitalist metaphor but where it really you know where it cashes out into enjoyment now
pleasure now and the tragedy of that for anybody is that if you do that all your life and never
quite get there then when your life stops you sort of missed the potential for the deepest value of life and it
isn't just an argument for you know smelling the roses and meditating and reading novels it's an
argument for how we go about building businesses and making podcasts and you know working on
community projects and parenting it's not that these are not things that have a sort of
end point goal of some kind it's that their value can't entirely come from that end point if you
ever want to sort of experience the fullness of of life why do we do it i mean putting aside really
important stuff about you know being raised to do it and cultural and economic pressures i think the
reason we do it and i sort of tried to get a little bit towards this in an earlier answer
but is because in instrumentalizing time there is the sense that the goal to which you're headed
belongs to a realm of limitlessness a realm where you're immortal a realm where you're not
constrained by your limited
time or talents it's really hard to put this into words but actually Keynes who got that 15 hour
week wrong puts this beautifully in the same thing where he says I think I can quote this from
memory something like the purposive man by which he means the person who is locked into this
instrumental mindset is always securing for his actions a spurious immortality by pushing
the value of them further and further into the future he doesn't really love his cat but only
his cat's kittens nor even in truth the kittens but the kittens kittens and so on forever to the
end of catdom which is a really nice quote but but also you know i think it gets
to this it's hard to convey but i think a lot of people can feel it when they get inside a quote
like that that like projecting forwards all the time is to kind of project your life forever to
think that the meaning of life is something you're getting to is in part a defense mechanism against
the sort of unnerving and scary and anxiety-inducing,
but ultimately, I think, really beautiful truth that this is it. Actually, it's now.
And it will be now tomorrow as well, hopefully, for you and for me. But this is it. It's here
that meaning has to be made, if it's ever going to be made.
Yeah. And you also share another quote, Thomas Wolfe, you share,
we are the sum of all the moments of our lives. All that is ours is in them. We cannot escape it or conceal it. And then you
follow, if we're going to show up for and thus find some enjoyment in our brief time on this
planet, we had better show up for it now. And yeah, really speaks to that. And one thing I love too is then you say, yeah, but you also can't try.
You can't try to enjoy the present moment. And I certainly have that experience of like, okay,
I've been really looking forward to, let's say this dinner or this vacation, I'm going to try
to enjoy it. And you really can't because that pressure is the separation of yourself from the experience. So it is really
hard to articulate the savoring and enjoying and being with the moment and not trying to.
I don't know if there's anything else you'd add to that.
Yeah, I'm sort of throwing up obstacles in every direction there, just because I think that's true.
And that if you respond to any of this message by thinking any of these thoughts,
like, oh, I'm going to be really present in the moment today, or I'm going to eke every inch of
value out of life today by just doing remarkable things all day, you know, you are, as you say,
or as you imply, maybe, you know, you're still reinforcing this distance between
meaning and you, or, you know know a rich experience of life and you
here now i think the answer such as there is one to the extent there is one has to just come from
seeing that this is just true that you always are in the moment that if you postpone meaning
entirely to a later point you're going to miss out on life and it's just from sort of
entirely to a later point you're going to miss out on life and it's just from sort of understanding that a little bit preferably on a kind of a bodily level and letting your shoulders drop a little bit
and not you know unless you're much better at it than me it's not a question of figuring this out
and then sticking with it every minute for the rest of your life but just enough to see that like
you know to pick an example from my life that like to be more fully in the rest of your life but just enough to see that like you know to pick an
example from my life that like to be more fully in the experience of like reading a bedtime story
with a kid or having a meal with a older parent or some you know with one of your parents something
like this just to sort of be in it in that spirit of like well there's nowhere else to be so i might
as well i think that phrase might as well has always been really powerful for me
it's like it's got a kind of a resignation to it but it's the right it's the right attitude in a
sense it's like this is it so you might as well be here as fully as it seems possible to be yeah
I really felt a sense of you know holding things a little lighter not trying to control or force
obviously you're you're certainly cautioning us against
that, and that we can't even control or force even if we wanted to. So to hold it lighter and
to be with what is, is the only thing we can do. And then you also kind of expand this to really
caution us against like human hubris, right, to kind of get smaller. And you call this cosmic
insignificance therapy. And this was so interesting
to me because I, in part, work as a livelihood coach, really helping folks find their mythopoetic
identity or their calling or their contribution to the just transition or the great turning,
really with this kind of sense of rising to the occasion of the challenges of our time.
And of course, you don't say,
let's not address climate change or social injustices
or things that we're facing.
You just say, let's hold our importance
and our ability to kind of change the world we're in more lightly
and really embrace the kind of insignificance of ourselves in the
cosmos. And then in that same vein, turn towards things that we can more easily turn towards,
as well as the bigger things, right? You talked about, you know, supporting an aging parent with
Alzheimer's or, you know, picking up trash, perhaps, you know, so this like,
it's like both the grand and the big, but also holding that lightly and doing what is directly around us and what we can make a difference in. I don't know if I'm if I'm saying that well,
but that's kind of how I interpret it. What would you say to that point?
Yeah, I think it's a great way of putting it. I think that. So yeah, when I talk about
cosmic insignificant therapy, I'm just sort of encouraging readers to consider how tiny even frankly the whole of human civilization or
sort of you know human existence is let alone one's own life in the grandest of grand schemes
of things and the time scale and the spatial scale of the of the cosmos and i'm always
struggling a bit i think i just about managed in the book but i'm always struggling a bit to
explain why i think this is not a recipe for sort of mediocrity or for not figuring out your role in
the great turnings of the eras or anything but actually an understanding of what it really means
to enter into them fully because it's to do with sort of really
wholeheartedly finding and occupying your place in this thing with a full full understanding of
how minuscule that place is but firstly that's the way it is and you single-handedly on your own
changing the whole of course of history is not is not on the cards but also
because there's something very kind of i think a lot of us when we sort of worry about whether our
lives are meaningful or we're doing meaningful things or making a difference we use this rather
arbitrary really standard of meaning which which says implicitly i mean it's it gets a bit
ridiculous if you spell it out in words but like implicitly, it's like if the things I do now aren't detectable as having made a difference to the world in a millennium's time or something, then they're not meaningful.
Or maybe it's 100 years or maybe it's the end of history.
It's ridiculous in a way.
It's so out of reach.
And yet there's no reason, I i argue to use this standard of meaning it's where we
naturally go somehow but actually it feels meaningful to do some of the things you mentioned
and you know make dinner for your kid or have a meaningful communication i get all these kind of
not to brag but like i've got a bunch of really kind of moving and interesting and
poignant emails from people in response to the book and then some of them at least uh i managed
to sort of write back to and engage with people about that's a meaningful experience that feels
like we both showed up for a little bit of our time on the planet i don't think i can make a
strong case that anyone's gonna care that that exchange
took place 200 years from now but i just want to say maybe let go of that being the thing you think
you need to have for it to be for it to be meaningful and then this is where it sort of
gets a bit paradoxical and i hope not contradictory if you can live a little bit more in that way as i say i think you do more more fully take your place
in grand truly universe changing events and you know a handful of people in every generation it's
going to be their role to make the scientific breakthrough that really does make a you know
vast difference for many millions of people and for some other people it's going to be playing the guitar in the coffee shop where those ideas get thrashed out. You know, it's like,
whatever. It's like, it's like, it's all, it can all be meaningful. It can all be showing up.
Yeah. I'm recalling Joanna Macy, eco-justice, Buddhist philosopher and activist. She says,
any act with good intention sends out ripple effects into the web of life in ways we cannot measure or even
see so it really does go back to that the effort or the action for the sake of it intrinsically
and kind of letting go of what may be the results or the impact of that action that first we may not
be able to ever measure or even see the impact of our action and that it's the intrinsic value of doing it,
even when things look bleak or it doesn't look hopeless or it may not make any difference,
that that's kind of a wise approach to our actions in the world. And I'm also thinking
of Martin Shaw who says, you know, don't let a Hercules complex land on your shoulders.
land on your shoulders. So it is that showing up and playing our part, and yet not taking kind of a self-important grandiosity to our efforts. It's holding our egos, perhaps,
a little bit lightly, maybe. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's a lovely way of putting it.
Well, one of the main gifts for me from your book was really inviting me to
consider what is most important to me and what is most important right now and i know that there is
a buddhist saying i don't know who said it but this buddhist saying of the most important thing
is to know what is the most important thing and it's something i've been working with of like what
is most important right now? What
is most important? And I really love that your book could be perceived as a time efficiency book,
time management, and then you just totally Akito move it and really say, what is most important
right now? So I'm wondering, can you share the story of the Warren Buffett, the 525 rule, and just what you learned about prioritizing what's most important to us?
Like, why is that an offering and how might we do that?
Yeah, sure.
So the story is attributed to Warren Buffett, but as I say in the book, probably apocryphally.
apocryphally. And it's just this idea that he was asked, you know, again, purportedly by his personal pilot, how to think about and focus on what matters in life and figure out your priorities.
And he argued that you should, in the story, he says you should list your 25 most important
goals in life in descending order from one to 25. And then the top five of those are the ones that you
should pour your time and attention into. But then this is the crucial twist. The remaining 20 are
not things that you should like do a bit on if you get some time here or there, but they are the ones
that you should avoid like the plague because they are the ones that are meaningful to you,
but not quite sufficiently meaningful to you to warrant
using your incredibly precious time on them it's really easy to not waste time on things that you
consider meaningless by and large maybe some people have to do some work that they consider
meaningless but but you know i'm at no risk of spending too much of my time watching paint dry because it's a meaningless task and
it's not alluring but i'm at great risk of not spending enough time with friends or family
members who i love the most because i'm sort of maintaining maybe some of those sort of friendships that
have slightly become zombie friendships and you know they're perfectly okay they're they're they're
nice enough but they're not quite don't quite reach that that level of um being worth it
even this story doesn't quite put the thumbscrews on as much as I feel like we probably should here and say, because it
still has this sense that, you know, you can make this ranking and that you can reasonably say that
there are activities or people in your life that are only at position 17 or something. I think the
really sort of agonizing, anguishing truth about all this is that in the end there are going to be things we don't get
time to do and have to sort of accept not getting time to do that would have been perfectly good
contenders for the top five that this is the thing i'm always sort of banging on about that the
mistake that i think people make i've certainly made is is that if you get really good at managing
your time and saying no and all the rest of it you can just make time for everything that matters and waste no time on anything that
doesn't matter but in fact that that set of things that matter there's just no reason to believe that
it's something we can get our arms around that was something we can find time for all of or even
very much of and so it's that sort of leveling that i think is so important as
a certainly for prioritization in life it's that leveling that says look if i'm not going to pursue
this potential hobby right now or i'm not going to go on this trip right now it's not because i
don't need to persuade myself that that would have been a useless use of my time i don't need to do
that i don't need to try and trick myself into thinking that I wouldn't have enjoyed it. No, I can say I really would have enjoyed it. It really would
have been good, but it's just that I have to make some choice. And if you can get into this way of
thinking, it actually can get easier to make choices because this is relates to something called fredkin's paradox but
this funny idea that actually if two things are kind of roughly equal have roughly equally good
claims on your time for the next hour day month whatever it is however you're thinking then it
kind of doesn't matter which one you choose right you might as well toss a coin it feels much more
agonizing but if they're both really meaningful
and you're both and you're drawn to them both and you and you have to choose one and not the other
not always the case that you have to choose one not the other but then it the answer to how do
you choose what matters what to focus on is like if you really understand our situation when it
comes to time and finitude you're going to have enough things that matter to be able to put a few of them in and not do the others. It's not going to be difficult in that
sense, I think. What do you think? Yeah, no, I really appreciated that. And that's something
that's been working on me since I read the book. And one way that I relate to this, I did this
activity with some students in creating their
own metrics, because I'm interested in alternative metrics in economics, like donut economics
or gross national happiness.
And one person said one of their metrics of happiness or well-being or contentedness was
not did they complete everything on their to-do list, but did their to-do list end up
matching their time and energy available that day? Like that that was a new metric of success for them. And I think that's kind of really what you're speaking to. Are we not chasing an endless task or to-do list, but are we balancing how much time and energy we have and how much attention we have and what we fill it with or
what we do with it. So I'd love to end with some invitations for listeners, such as thinking
through our metrics and really looking at our to-do list differently and asking ourselves what
is most important. And I also love in the instrumentalization of time, you talk about leisure
time. And this is a quote from your book, you say, spend at least some of your leisure time
wastefully, focus solely on the pleasure of the experience. This is the only way not to waste it,
to be truly at leisure, rather than covertly engaged in future focused self improvement.
So that was a delicious thing to read, again,
as someone who does instrumentalize time and working on that now from reading your book.
But I'm just new appreciation for my bowling hobby and for playing Magic the Gathering,
things that I'm particularly not good at, and I don't really see how they self-improve
or they encourage my self-improvement. Another invitation, and then
I'm going to ask you for yours. Another invitation, you bring up this Carl Jung quote,
quietly do the next and most necessary thing. Quietly do the next and most necessary thing.
That's another word that's been working on me from reading your book. This idea of I don't
need to make a big deal out of it. And also it's more task oriented, like what is necessary and what is next and to do it quietly. And there's a humility
aspect to that phrase. So I really thank you for weaving that in. And then lastly, to not rush,
right? To allow things to take the time they need to take, to watch your relationship with rush
and to cultivate patience. Maybe go wait in a line just for the sake of
waiting in a line. So Oliver, I want to ask you, and I know that the book, especially the ending,
the last chapter and the afterward really invites some things for listeners and beautiful questions
and some invitations. So what invitations would you have for us going forward beyond those that
I mentioned? Well, one that forward beyond those that I mentioned?
Well, one that springs to mind that I always find really powerful is this idea of considering what if you never change in the way that you think you need to change? What if
you never, in the context of time, get into this position of total control of your time,
or you never beat your procrastination or your anxiety or something like that borrowing
here partly again from bruce tift who i mentioned earlier and his book already free what if these
things that we spend our lives struggling to fix about ourselves and our situations it's a really
interesting experiment thought experiment to us like if that was just never going to change if i
was going to be anxious about having too much on my plate to the end of my days, like what could that free up? Like if you weren't focused on that
endless struggle, what could you just get on with now that really, that really mattered?
And it's closely related to that idea of, you know, what if you knew that there was never going
to be enough time? You were going to die with an incredibly long to-do list. Like what if that, what if that was
just all totally a given? What could you do? You know, what would that unleash once you weren't
focused on that? And yeah, I guess these are all different versions of the same thing.
Now I think about it, but the other way of thinking about that is like, I love this notion that it's really therapeutic to consider that your situation might be worse than
you think because especially when it comes to time we tend to feel that we've got far too much to do
and staying on top of it all is really hard or we're really anxious about the future and feeling
confident about what's happening in the future is a matter of really having to do a lot of planning and contingency planning and forecasting and all the rest of it.
But what if in all those kinds of cases, it wasn't that these things were really hard,
but completely impossible? What if it was just off the table to stay on top of everything? What
if there was just no hope of knowing what was coming down the pike?
I think that often we suffer because we keep open this thought that there might be a solution,
there might be a way to fix the terms and conditions of being human. And it's that little
bit of hope that kills you in a sense, right? I mean, it's keeping the thought that there might
be some solution to this fundamental situation that is so tormenting and if you sort of think about like wow how liberating could it be to just
see that there wasn't going to be a solution to that that we had to be free in our lives and in
time instead of sort of free from our current situation or overwhelm or whatever it might be
so some thoughts there maybe.
You've been listening to an Upstream conversation with Oliver Berkman,
author of 4,000 Weeks,
Time Management for Mortals.
Thank you to The Weaker Dance
for the intermission music
and to Carolyn Rader for the cover art.
Upstream theme music was composed by me, Robbie.
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