Hello everyone, if this is your first time on this channel, please make sure to subscribe and if you're not new here, welcome back. Have you ever had that voice in your head telling you that it's too late to learn how to play in guitar, too late to learn a new language, too late to start a blog or too late to start a business? This is called time anxiety and the amount of things we don't do because of it is crazy.
I'll give you a personal example. 10 years ago, I was working at Google and I was helping the YouTube team organize an event for YouTubers, which was called VidCon. Literally the biggest event for YouTubers and their fans. YouTubers there were giving talks, signing autographs and generally connecting with their audience. There was thousands of people under one roof, a celebration of YouTube as a platform and a community and I had a seat at the front row. I could see how exciting YouTube could be but I didn't start a YouTube channel. Why? Time anxiety.
I looked at all of these YouTubers. Most of them had started their channels when they were 14 or 15 or 16 and at the time I thought, well, this is too late. There's no point in starting now. This is how time anxiety works because we demand that the way we spend our time is meaningful. We decide to not start on projects when we think that we don't have enough time that it's too late or that we missed the boat.
Well, as you can see today, I finally came around and realized that it was wrong and I started my YouTube channel but I lost 10 times in the process. The term time anxiety was coined by Dr. Alex Lickerman, who explained that it comes from following questions. Am I creating the greatest amount of value with my life that I can? Will I feel when it comes my time to die that I spend too much of my time frivolously?
It's important to understand that time anxiety doesn't mean that you think there is a higher entity that is giving purpose to your life but the better it means that you are placing a lot of the meaning in your life into the value that you are producing. As a result, too late to start, I'd better not start at all. It may seem paradoxical but by trying to other optimize our lives in this way, we are actually reducing the amount of value and meaning that we can bring into our lives.
Beating time anxiety means expanding your perception of possible. It means stopping having all of these artificial barriers that you're creating for yourself and remembering that as long as you're alive today, there is literally no reason not to start something new. Instead of focusing on the outcomes, like, yeah, having one million YouTube subscribers, that does take a long time or having a massive newsletter or being completely fluent in the language, it's about focusing on your input, publishing your first video on YouTube, writing your first blog post, learning your first few words in this language that you want to learn.
Everyone you're looking at is more advanced than you are had to start from scratch at some point. It's the same for everyone and it doesn't mean that because someone today is more advanced than you and their journey, you can't start your own journey as well. They say that all good things come in threes. Well, time anxiety is not that good but it also comes in three different forms.
The first one is current time anxiety. It's the daily feeling of being rushed, of not having enough time to complete all of your tasks, which sometimes makes you feel a little bit panicky. Lots of people who struggle with current time anxiety also sometimes have panic attacks.
The second one is future time anxiety. This is all of the what if questions that you have about the future. It's a lot of worrying about what will happen tomorrow or in one year or in five years. We worry so much about the future that we don't have enough mental space left to think about the present.
And finally, existential time anxiety probably the hardest to deal with because it's about having the sensation of seeing time float away to never come back again. It's very common to have existential time anxiety when we think about death.
So how do you manage time anxiety? Well, the first thing is to remember what is the nature of time. Time moves forward, never backwards. There's nothing you can do about that. And it's the same for absolutely everyone, at least in our universe. This feels like a basic truth, but we are constantly trying to run away from it, accepting that time moves forward, never backwards, and that you're never going to get it back, is the first step in dealing with time anxiety.
I'm sure you're like, well, this is really negative. How is that helping me? Well, it's really important to internalize that idea because this way, you will really know that everything that has happened as happened. That's fine. What will happen, the only time you're in control is the present and it's the decisions you're taking today that will influence where you are in the future. So you have to act today as a gift to your future self.
This is all for you, if I was optical, so let's get to a bit more practical here. There are three things you can do to deal with time anxiety in a more practical way.
First, you need to define what does time well spent means to you? By time well spent, I don't mean what is time that you can spend today in a meaningful way that is going to be helpful to future you. Adjustments, what are ways to spend your time there are enjoyable to you that gets you in the flow and that make you happy, regardless of the outcome. Instead of thinking about how big your YouTube channel could be, how big your blog could be, or how violent goal it could be in a few years, think about how enjoyable the process of learning and growing and creating is. Don't think about how happy you would make you if you were to publish a book. Ask yourself, do I really enjoy writing? Don't think about how you're going to be so proud of completing a marathon. Ask yourself, do I really like running? Try to be as honest as possible with yourself.
Now that you've defined what time well spent means to you, the second step is to actually make time for these moments. Just go to your calendar, open it, look at it, and again be honest with yourself. Is there enough time during the week to dedicate to these activities that intrinsically make you happy? As you go about your week, it's okay if sometimes life happens and you just don't have as much time as you expected to dedicate to these activities, but it's really about trying, about being conscious and aware of your schedule and the way you spend your time in general. As the perfect writer Maria Edwards said, if you take care of the moments, the years will take care of themselves.
Finally, try to cut out useless distractions. It's completely okay from time to time to be scrolling on Twitter or Instagram, but sometimes it can make time anxiety worse because you're looking back and thinking about all of this time that you wasted. Try to replace some of these useless distractions where things that are a bit more creative or make you happier. That could be just hanging up with friends, watching a really good movie, writing, learning how to design, learning in an instrument, a new language, it really doesn't matter. But try to make sure that you don't spend too much time on distracting activities. There are going to make you feel worse when it comes to your time anxiety.
I just want to be honest here, I still struggle with time anxiety all the time. But being aware of what it is and how to manage it makes it a little bit easier to deal with. It's okay if you still feel that deep anxiety when you think about death, about the fact that time only moves forward and not backwards and that you're never going to get the minutes you spend today back. But instead of making it a depressing feeling, try to channel these ideas to make you act today to be more productive, more creative, spend more time with the people you love. The fact that we have so little time and that we can never get it back can actually be a driving factor to help us achieve more.