There’s a phrase that has become so embedded in professional culture that most people don’t even notice it anymore: time management.
We build systems around it, buy planners for it, and take courses in it. And yet, for all the infrastructure we construct in its name, most people still feel perpetually behind — stretched, scattered, and vaguely guilty about how the day went.
Here’s what I’ve come to believe: the phrase itself is the problem.
To manage time is to treat it as a resource you can control. But time is the one thing that behaves the same regardless of what you do. You cannot compress it, recover it, or redirect it. The hours pass whether you’re fully present in them or not. Framing your life around “managing” something that cannot be managed is a setup for the exact kind of exhaustion you’re trying to escape.
What can be managed — stewarded, really — is energy.
A Different Question to Ask Yourself
In my conversation with Erin Coupe, author of I Can Fit That In: How Rituals Transform Your Life, she put it plainly: “You are a steward of your energy, not a manager of your time.” It’s a distinction that sounds modest until you start pulling on the thread.
A steward doesn’t own what they’re tending. They’re responsible for it. They make choices about how it gets used, what it’s directed toward, and what it’s protected from. That’s a fundamentally different relationship than management — and it changes the questions you ask yourself throughout the day.
Instead of how do I fit more in?, you start asking what is this costing me, and is it worth it? Instead of why don’t I have enough time?, you start asking where is my energy actually going?
Those are harder questions. But they’re the right ones.
Rituals Give Something Back. Routines Just Take.
The shift becomes concrete when you look at how Erin distinguishes rituals from routines. Both are structured. Both are repetitive. But a routine, she argues, can be entirely lifeless — something you do because it’s there, because it’s always been there, because you’ve never stopped to ask whether it’s still serving you. A ritual, by contrast, is something you choose, because you know — consciously, intentionally — that it’s going to give something back.
That’s an energy transaction. Not a time transaction.
When I think about the rituals I’ve built into my own work — the pour-over coffee in the morning, the themed days, the intentional boundaries around when I’m available and when I’m not — none of them are primarily about saving time. They’re about ensuring that the energy I bring to what matters is actually there when I need it.
The coffee ritual doesn’t save fifteen minutes. It centers me. That’s the return on investment — not efficiency, but presence.
Productivity Is Emotional — Whether You Acknowledge It or Not
Erin also makes a point that I think deserves more attention than it typically gets: productivity is deeply emotional. Not in a soft, motivational-poster kind of way, but in a hard-wired, neurological kind of way. If you’re carrying suppressed frustration, unprocessed anxiety, or the ambient weight of a life lived mostly on autopilot, that weight consumes energy. It’s running in the background all day, drawing down your capacity for the things that actually matter.
When you start to develop self-awareness — when you stop squashing emotions and start letting them move through you — you feel lighter. That lightness is not a metaphor. It translates directly into more to give.
This is why the pause matters. Not as a luxury, or a reward for having finished everything else, but as an essential maintenance condition for being someone who can show up fully in their own life.
Warren Buffett reportedly said, decades ago, that a packed calendar is not a sign of importance. If someone operating at that level can hold space in his schedule, most of us have less excuse than we think.
The Shift That Doesn’t Show Up on an App
The real question isn’t whether you have time for the things that matter. It’s whether you’ve made the shift from asking about time at all — and started asking about worth, meaning, and energy instead.
That shift won’t show up on a productivity app. It won’t fit neatly into a morning routine checklist. But it will show up in how your days feel, and over time, in what your life looks like from the inside.
