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In Good Time

8 Habits for Reimagining Productivity, Resisting Hurry, and Practicing Peace

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
Whether we're trying to find time, save it, manage it, or make the most of it, one word defines our relationship with the clock: anxiety. Yet is productivity really the only grid for the good life? Have you ever imagined a life without hurry, relentless work, multitasking, or scarcity? A life that is characterized instead by presence, attention, rest, rootedness, fruitfulness, and generosity? This is the kind of life we are meant for, says Jen Pollock Michel. But if we want to experience freedom from time anxiety, we have to reimagine our relationship with time itself. With In Good Time, she invites you to disentangle your priorities from our modern assumptions and instead ground them in God's time. Then she shows you how to establish eight life-giving habits that will release you from the false religion of productivity so you can develop a grounded, healthy, life-giving relationship with the clock.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 17, 2022
      “Time belongs not to us but to God,” contends Englewood Review of Books podcaster Michel (A Habit Called Faith) in this pensive meditation. Lambasting time management strategies that prioritize productivity, Michel argues that readers must instead accept that “there is always enough time to do what God has planned.” The “eight habits” she recommends might more accurately be called general principles to follow, and they include exercising patience as God’s plan unfurls and offering one’s time and attention to God. She frames her advice with personal anecdotes about how the Covid-19 pandemic affected her conception of time, recounting how she took weeks to savor Saint Benedict’s The Rule of Saint Benedict and imparting its lesson that learning to worship God is “like a handcraft” and takes time. She closes with an elegiac and elliptical exhortation to “remember that you die,” waxing poetic on living with one’s mortality: “Wear your yeses to a nub. Let your brimming cup of joy, even in the long, dark valleys of no and wish I could, bear witness to the God who enjoys you.” What following this advice looks like in practice remains unclear, but Michel succeeds in putting earthly concerns in cosmic perspective. These insightful musings are worth a look.

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  • English

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