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How to find guilt-free time for what you really want to do, and why it matters Do you feel like you're always busy, even as your to-do list continues to grow? Do you think you can't keep up as it is, let alone add another thing to your plate? An award-winning journalist, avid reader and new mom, Karma Brown dreamed of writing her first novel. But between diapers and tight deadlines, how could she? Like so many of us, she felt stretched taut and hyper-scheduled, her time a commodity over which she had lost control. For Brown, the answer to this problem was to rise earlier every day and use that time to write. Although she experienced missteps along the way, after committing to her alarm clock and an online community of early risers, she completed a debut novel that became a national bestseller. In The 4% Fix, Karma Brown reveals the latest research about time management and goal-setting and shares strategies that have worked for her as well as for others. Refreshingly, her jargon-free approach doesn't include time-tracking spreadsheets, tips on how to squeeze in yoga exercises while cooking dinner, or methods that add bulk to those never-ending lists. How will you use this one hour--only 4% of your day--to change your life?
Reviews with the most likes.
At its core, this is just about putting the thing you want to do first/putting yourself first by literally doing it first thing - the 5am thing seems unnecessary if you don't have other early morning people in your life. I do this when I'm trying to prioritize something (gym, language learning, work, etc) but largely I just read when I'm up early - I'm not sure what I'd really want to do with a dedicated hour daily. I like chilling and Brown is using her writing/which is also her livelihood/ as her example which feel like more #hustle #riseandgrind although she tries to argue against that interpretation. Maybe I'm just too slack for this to feel revolutionary. Just making it through pandemic times babes.