We are taught to manage our time: fill every hour of the calendar to be productive. But have you ever sat at your computer for two hours, staring at a screen, achieving nothing? That is a failure of energy, not time. Energy management is often more critical than time management.
Time is linear and finite; you have 24 hours. Energy is cyclical and renewable. We all have “chronotypes”—natural rhythms of energy peaks and troughs. Some people are morning larks who are sharpest at 8:00 AM. Others are night owls who peak at 8:00 PM.
To be truly productive, you must map your tasks to your energy levels. Do your hardest, most creative “deep work” during your peak hours. If you are a morning person, do not waste your 9:00 AM energy answering routine emails. Save that low-energy admin work for your “afternoon slump” around 2:00 PM when your brain is naturally tired.
You must also view rest not as “time off” but as “recovery.” Just as an athlete rests between sets to lift heavy weights again, you need to rest your brain to maintain focus.
Stop asking “Do I have time for this?” and start asking “Do I have the energy for this?” By aligning your workflow with your biology, you can get more done in four focused hours than most people do in eight distracted ones.






