Lately I have been feeling like twenty-four hours is not enough. Not because I have too much work, but because every single hour seems to bring something new I want to learn. A new framework. A new tool. A new piece of research. A new opinion from someone I respect. By the time I close one tab, three more have opened in my head. I catch myself doing the math in the shower — sleep seven, work eight, pray and eat and commute, that leaves maybe three or four hours of focused time. Not a lot when the input keeps multiplying.
And yet most people I know are not running out of time. They are running out of attention. They have all the time in the world, and they spend it on things that, if we are being honest, do not move the needle. Endless scrolling on TikTok. Reels until the battery dies. Mobile games that reset every morning. I am not pointing at anyone else here. I have been that person. Sometimes I still am.
So the question I keep coming back to is simple: how do we handle so much information in an era that keeps producing more of it than any one human can absorb, and how do we make sure the time we do have is spent on things that actually matter?