Rory Vaden
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple, and this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple, and this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple, and this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple, and this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple, and this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple. And this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple. And this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple. And this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple. And this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
We all have 24 hours, which is 1,440 minutes or 86,400 seconds. But that's exactly the problem. Everyone believes they cannot get more time because that's what they've been told most often. So your brain believes it. In reality, you can create more time. You say, how? Simple. And this is the premise of the TED Talk and the whole second book.
The way that you multiply time is by spending time on things today that create more time tomorrow. While there's nothing you can do today to create more time today, there's all sorts of things you can do today that if you do them today, they will create time and space tomorrow that you would not have otherwise had.
The way that you multiply time is by spending time on things today that create more time tomorrow. While there's nothing you can do today to create more time today, there's all sorts of things you can do today that if you do them today, they will create time and space tomorrow that you would not have otherwise had.
The way that you multiply time is by spending time on things today that create more time tomorrow. While there's nothing you can do today to create more time today, there's all sorts of things you can do today that if you do them today, they will create time and space tomorrow that you would not have otherwise had.
The way that you multiply time is by spending time on things today that create more time tomorrow. While there's nothing you can do today to create more time today, there's all sorts of things you can do today that if you do them today, they will create time and space tomorrow that you would not have otherwise had.
The way that you multiply time is by spending time on things today that create more time tomorrow. While there's nothing you can do today to create more time today, there's all sorts of things you can do today that if you do them today, they will create time and space tomorrow that you would not have otherwise had.
We bucket those in something called the focus funnel, which again is sort of the flagship framework of the TED talk in the book. Well, it's eliminate, automate, delegate, concentrate are four of the five. The fifth one is procrastinate. And procrastinating on purpose is about procrastinating on purpose with the insignificant tasks. the trivial tasks.
We bucket those in something called the focus funnel, which again is sort of the flagship framework of the TED talk in the book. Well, it's eliminate, automate, delegate, concentrate are four of the five. The fifth one is procrastinate. And procrastinating on purpose is about procrastinating on purpose with the insignificant tasks. the trivial tasks.
We bucket those in something called the focus funnel, which again is sort of the flagship framework of the TED talk in the book. Well, it's eliminate, automate, delegate, concentrate are four of the five. The fifth one is procrastinate. And procrastinating on purpose is about procrastinating on purpose with the insignificant tasks. the trivial tasks.
We bucket those in something called the focus funnel, which again is sort of the flagship framework of the TED talk in the book. Well, it's eliminate, automate, delegate, concentrate are four of the five. The fifth one is procrastinate. And procrastinating on purpose is about procrastinating on purpose with the insignificant tasks. the trivial tasks.
We bucket those in something called the focus funnel, which again is sort of the flagship framework of the TED talk in the book. Well, it's eliminate, automate, delegate, concentrate are four of the five. The fifth one is procrastinate. And procrastinating on purpose is about procrastinating on purpose with the insignificant tasks. the trivial tasks.