5 Ways to Master Your Time: Don’t Let

by San San
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Another Day Slip Away​There’s a feeling I think most of us know all too well: the sensation of being busy all day, spinning your wheels and juggling a million things, only to hit the end of the day feeling empty because the things that actually matter are still sitting untouched on your to-do list.​

I’ve met many people who dying to learn a new skill—like photography or mixology—but their catchphrase is always, “I’m just too busy.” I’ve seen people (myself included) who know exactly what needs to be done but keep dragging their feet until the last possible second, finishing in a blind panic.​

The truth is, we don’t have a time deficit. Everyone gets the same 24 hours. What we lack is a “game plan” to keep from being swept away by the clock. Here are five small secrets I’ve used to take back the wheel of my life.​

1. Be Intentional with Your Phone

​The biggest “black hole” in our lives is that glowing rectangle in our pockets. Some days, I’d check my screen time report and be horrified: 5 hours, 7 hours… just aimlessly scrolling. The part that hurts most is realizing that time wasn’t spent on work—it was just because my hands were idle.​

I tried a simple “hack”: I set my lock screen wallpaper to a plain image that says, “What are you using this phone for right now?”

​Now, every time I go to unlock my phone out of habit, those words stop me in my tracks. Am I here to check a client’s email? To text my mom back? If I have a reason, I do it and get out. If I don’t, I realize I’m just “unconsciously” burning daylight. That tiny moment of friction saves me hours every single week.​

“A phone is a magnificent tool, provided you are using it to serve your purpose, not letting it spend your life for you.”​

2. Script Your Day in Advance

​The main reason I used to work so slowly was that I kept stopping to ask myself, “Okay, what’s next?” Constant decision-making drains your mental battery.

​Instead, I now spend the last 10 minutes of my evening “scripting” the next day. I pick 3 to 5 “must-do” tasks and rank them. But the real secret is visualization: I walk through the steps in my head. If I have a report to write tomorrow, I close my eyes and think:

Step 1: Open the data file.

Step 2: Create the charts.

Step 3: Write the summary.​

When I have that script in my head, I don’t have to think the next morning—I just show up and “perform.” No overthinking, no mental tug-of-war.​

3. “Eat the Frog” First Thing​

Mark Twain famously said that if your job is to eat a live frog, you should do it first thing in the morning. The “frog” is that task that is the hardest, the most intimidating, or the one you want to avoid so badly it makes you want to go back to sleep.​

Usually, that’s exactly the task that moves the needle the most. I’ve realized that if I dodge that frog, I spend the whole day under a cloud of anxiety and guilt. But if I tackle it right when I wake up—when my energy is peaking—the rest of the day feels like a breeze. Once the highest mountain is behind you, everything else is just a stroll in the park.​

“Knock out your toughest task in the morning, and you’ll spend the rest of your day fueled by confidence and relief.”​

4. Start with a “Lead-in” Task

​Sometimes the frog is so big it’s terrifying to even open your mouth. In those moments, I use a “lead-in” strategy.​

I start with a step so small it’s impossible to fail. If I have to write a long article, I tell myself: “I’m just going to turn on the computer and type the headline. Then I can quit if I want.” But a funny thing happens—once the headline is down, I want to write the intro. Then the momentum kicks in and the work starts flowing on its own.

​It’s like a bicycle: the first few pedals are the heaviest, but once the wheels are spinning, it takes much less effort to keep moving.​

“Taking one tiny step is often the only way to finish a journey of a thousand miles.”​

5. Time Management Is Actually Habit Management​

After trying every method under the sun, I’ve realized there is no “magic bullet.” Some days I need iron-clad discipline; other days I need flexibility. The core of it is self-awareness—knowing yourself well enough to choose the right tool for the job.

​Managing your time isn’t about turning yourself into a robot; it’s about shifting small habits every day. When you master your unconscious habits, you’ll realize you aren’t short on time—it’s just been waiting for you to get organized.​

“When we master our habits, we master our destiny.”

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