How often do you check the time on your phone? Does looking at your watch stress you out? My watch gave me headaches. It reminded me of the fact that I would be late (again) or not be able to finish that project in time or miss the train by one minute. Earlier this month most of us manipulated time by 'springing ahead.' Isn't it crazy that we can just move time around to suit us, yet time waits for no one? So I lost sleep over that time change, and will gain it back in November. Why do I have to wait until November to get that hour back? Why do we continue to move our clocks that way? It's outdated and all it does is upset my sleep pattern. We make it all up anyway. We can never find more time, and we must use time to keep things orderly. What if there really was no time? Time is marked by seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years, decades, centuries... and it's all made up. After many years of watch-induced headaches, I finally stopped wearing a watch. Strangely, though, once I stopped attaching myself to time, I was always on time. Not early, not late: on time. Very eerie. I also learned that when I pull my past into the present moment, I lose time. By viewing present situations through what happened in the past - by living in my head, in those old stories - I miss out on where I am right now. And since right now is the only time that exists anyway, why waste time by living in the past? It's like when I used to check my watch 25 times an hour (not believing that I would once again be late). For what? I couldn't turn back the clock and change the time. Right now is what is meaningful. This moment in time. Spend it wisely. ©Catherine Borowski, 2017 www.celebratingwealth.com
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Celebrating Wealth®
Live a wealthy life. AUTHOR
Catherine Borowski, life coach, knows that life can be messy. And it's through the mess that beauty emerges in the most unexpectedly brilliant ways. Archives
May 2020
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