The story of a Harvard PhD with a chronic illness will help you pinpoint how you should be spending your time every day
On a micro level, this is pretty obvious: If you spend the entire morning answering emails, you definitely won't have that project report ready by noon.
On a macro level, this logic is harder to internalize: You probably can't be a top-notch mom, manager, community board member, yogi, and musician. At least not all the time. (And if you've found that to be false, please share with us your secrets.)
In his new book, "Barking Up the Wrong Tree," Eric Barker - who runs a popular blog by the same name as the book - shares a story that can help readers come to terms with those temporal limitations.
Barker shares the story of Spencer Glendon, a partner at a big money-management firm who was a Fulbright Scholar and got his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard.
He's also spent much of his life battling serious illness: In high school, Barker writes, Glendon suffered from chronic ulcerative colitis. When he got an organ transplant, he had to go through immunosuppressive therapy, leaving him with a weakened immune system.
In high school, when he was seriously ill, Glendon saw a therapist who suggested that he focus on accomplishing one thing a day - even if that thing was simply making dinner.
Barker writes:
Barker recommends:
Everyone has limitations - in Glendon's case, it's his physical abilities, but in someone else's case, it might be energy, attention, or time. A big key to success is working within those limitations and being the best you can be at something, not everything.