Time: My thoughts about it & a resource for spending it

On Redeeming Your Time, by Jordan Raynor


I have a really hard time in an arcade (I’m sorry if you own one - maybe yours is different!). Call me snobby, but it’s an attack on my senses: the neon lights, the unrelated sounds altogether, the aroma of fries and sweat. Even worse, it’s an attack on my sense of justice: the games that you can never really beat and the ticket exchange. 

The ticket exchange. I may have waited on the fringe of the chaos while my boys were playing, but this is my moment. I willingly emerge from the sidelines to guide, to process, and to help them make the most informed choice. The glass checkout counter invites a long decision-making process, arranging the options from 2-ticket erasers to out-of-reach Xboxes. 

With only so many tickets to redeem, even if they strategically pool their resources, they’ve spent more for pencils, stickers, and slime than I’d ever agree to pay for those things. I have a really hard time in an arcade. 

But in life, how many minutes have I spent like arcade tickets, exchanging them for plastic prizes, as if that’s what time is worth? Time spent culminates into life spent. My spending of time is my spending of life itself, and when I turn in at the end of the day, I want to know that time was well-spent. I only have so much of it.

In Redeeming Your Time, Jordan Raynor examines Jesus’ life and extrapolates practical principles for living out our minutes, hours, and days to their fullest potential.  It’s a book filled with both grace and truth: grace, because a relationship with Christ isn’t about more productive days, and truth, because too often we carelessly waste our days without the thought of Christ.  

He gently and passionately explores topics like organizing commitments, filtering the use of technology, and enjoying our limited capacity. He writes like he’s inviting a friend into something he can’t wait for the friend to experience, not like someone analyzing your time card.  

My biggest take-away from Redeeming Your Time is the step he calls “Practice 3: Schedule deep-work appointments with yourself”. Deep work is a concept about important projects that demand all of your attention over a period of time, and we only have the ability to do a limited amount of deep work each day.  When I’m working on something that matters deeply and needs intense focus, I should schedule that at the time of day when I am my strongest self.  

So when is your energy highest, and what are you pouring it into during that time frame? Please don’t say arcades!

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Matthew 6:1-18

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Habakkuk for the Holidays