Devotion has a way of sounding virtuous by default. If something matters, we’re told, we should give ourselves to it fully. No hedging. No hesitation. Just focus, discipline, and resolve.
But devotion isn’t automatically wise.
Held too tightly, devotion closes us off. It turns care into control. Attention narrows, feedback fades, and the very thing we’re devoted to begins to crowd out everything else that once gave it meaning. The danger isn’t distraction—it’s devotion that stops being examined.
At the same time, attention without devotion doesn’t remain neutral. When we don’t choose what deserves our care, something else does. Urgency steps in. Noise fills the space. Attention drifts not because we’re careless, but because we never gave it a place to return to.
The real work lives in between. Devotion that’s alive. Commitment that can be revisited without being abandoned. Attention that’s anchored, but not trapped. This is less about managing time and more about relating to it—about noticing where our attention goes, and why.
That noticing? That’s where depth begins.
If this idea resonates, I explore it (and others like it) more deeply in The Lantern, my weekly letter on time, attention, and the quiet shift from productivity to productiveness. You can sign up below to receive it, along with occasional notes designed to help you live and work with more intention, not just more activity.
