Time is valuable. The psychiatrist and author Mr. Scott Peck says, "until you value yourself, you can value your time. Until you value your time, you won't be able to do anything with it. "
In What to Do Between Birth and Death, Charles Spezzano says that people do not pay for things with money, but they pay them in time. If you say to yourself, "in five years I'll have saved enough money to buy my house from Vereno," What you're saying is that the house will cost you five years, a twelfth part of your life as an adult. "The phrase using your time is not a metaphor," says Spezzano. "That's life."
Instead of thinking in terms of money about what you do and what you buy, think in terms of time. Think about it. What's it worth to use your life? Seeing your work in that way could change the way you manage your time.
"Is it worth your life what you have in your AGENDA for this day?"