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Oliver Burkeman is an award-winning writer for The Guardian and his book, The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can’t Stand Positive Thinking explores the upsides of failure, difficulty, and imperfection – which we discussed in our first interview with Oliver several hundred episodes ago. Each week in his column in The Guardian, “This Column Will Change Your Life”, he writes about social psychology, self-help culture, productivity, and the science of happiness. In this interview, he discusses his take on time management in today’s world.
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In This Interview, Oliver Burkeman and I Discuss…

His take on the modern time management world

That technologies of efficiency don’t seem to bring peace of mind

How your to-do list is never going to go away

That having emails in your inbox is not necessarily a problem

Time management whispers of the possibility of true peace of mind

Thinking of “a simpler time”

How processing through your inbox is like climbing up an infinitely long ladder

That tough choices have to be made when deciding what to do with your time – no matter how many productivity assists you have

How it’s often easier to spend time on trivial stuff than the big projects

David Allen’s book, Getting Things Done

How no one beats them self up for not being able to jump a mile in the air because they never thought they could in the first place

Similarly, accepting the real limitations in how much time you have and how much you can get done is incredibly liberating 

Productivity advice from Warren Buffet

The role social media plays in our expectations about how productive we could or should be

How digital distractions help us numb out

Oliver Burkeman Links
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