I found myself feeling resentful earlier this week about the amount of time I was “wasting” at work one day. I had something more important which I was eager to do. I don’t work nearly as many hours now as I used to, but I felt impatient with work this week anyway.
As I grumbled inwardly, I started thinking about how much I’d worked in the past at other pursuits.
When I owned a couple of small start-up newspapers, I routinely worked between 100 and 110 hours a week. I was exhausted all the time, but I didn’t mind the effort. I loved what I was doing. I was passionate about it.
When I was a political consultant, there were weeks when I worked 80 or 90 hours, especially as an election approached. Other times during a year, I might work only a few hours a week. It varied. I was happy with that, too. I controlled my time — and I loved what I was doing.
What dominates my time now? Writing, photography, thinking — all about things which matter to me. My income tells you nothing about what I care about, but my use of time tells you everything. I’ve realized very clearly this week that my use of time — and where I put my attention — have always been a proxy for what I loved and what I was passionate about.
That’s true for you, too. And for everyone else.

Don’t personalize: The system is the issue, not Obama or any individual
How terrified would your child self have been of your current adult life?
What if ‘fixing’ a mental condition changes the person you are?
Will you sell more days of your life
Banning access to guns won’t prevent the evil in human hearts
Most important thing you’ll do for your child is selecting other parent
If you vote, you’re my real enemy — no matter who gets your vote
No matter who you are or what you’ve done, time is your enemy