An old friend of mine once said to me, “There’s a myth that’s going around these days, the myth says: If you can manage your time, you can do anything!”. Four years from hearing this advice, I don’t believe it’s a myth anymore.
We all hear about time management and  it’s importance, and people shout at us from time to time that we should  time manage properly, but rarely do we hear a concise methodology of  how to time manage!
In order to understand how to time  manage, you firstly need to understand what time management is about.  Time management is not about managing your time, because technically,  you cannot manage something you have no control over! (Can you stop,  start time?!) – Time management is simply managing yourself in a way that makes use of the time sphere we’re in.
So HOW exactly we do that?
So HOW exactly we do that?
Peter Drucker, author of the famous book “The Effective Executive” (Highly recommended reading)), recommends three steps to managing your time, and he actually calls the chapter that deals with this: “Know thy time”:
- Analyze your time.
- Cut back unproductive demands.
- Aim to complete tasks in large chunks of time.
So let’s get into more details of how to  follow the above three steps (adding the usual ProductiveMuslim Islamic  twist to it ;)).
Analyze your time:
Record your time over a course of at  least a week. I’ll be honest here, it’ll take a strong stomach to  realise how much time we waste in a course of a week. But being truthful  to oneself is the first step to remedy. There are 2 ways to record your  time:
- Keep a diary with you recording what you do each hour
- Ask your friend/flat-mate/spouse to analyze your time, (as we tend to be nice to ourselves when we record our own time, and end up ‘cheating’)
Cut back unproductive demands:
 Hopefully, after  recording our time, a sad realization would dawn upon us, and that is,  there’s a lot we can cut down from. e.g. do we really need to spend that  hour in the cafe in the morning, or is it just better to make some  coffee at home and read e-mails at the same time? Do we really need to  spend 2 hour everyday just flicking through TV channels or internet  sites or can we cut down from that time? (Note: please please don’t cut  back from time for Allah! Some people in order to ‘save’ time, will not  go to the mosque to pray for example, that’s not an unproductive demand  to cut down on, that’s an essential demand which we better keep, so  please don’t touch the religious stuff, we’re already guilty of not  giving enough time to them, let’s not use this excuse to make it worse!
Aim to complete tasks in large chunks of time:
Isn’t it annoying when you are working  on something so hard and you got really into it (sometimes called being  in ‘The Zone’) to be interrupted by a phone call or an e-mail alert or  text?! This third tip basically says that you should try to block time  off in large chunks of time, (some people suggest that 90 minutes is the  maximum they can concentrate at one time, but that’s 90 minutes of  uninterrupted time). This technique will help you achieve much more by  doing less, simply because you’re more focused at one task at a time.  Doing one task in one hour, will end up taking you 4 hours if you are  interrupted every 10-15 minutes. To help you block your time, refer to  our Daily Taskinator.
Well, that’s all for today. Hope this gives you a better understanding of how to turn the myth of time management into reality.

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