There are moments when I feel completely connected to time—and not because I’ve conquered it. Not because I’ve wrangled my schedule or hit inbox zero. Not even because I’ve carved out a perfect pocket of focus.
The connection I’m talking about feels lighter. Quieter. Almost unnoticed.
It’s the moment I’m standing in the kitchen and hear my son humming from the other room—out of rhythm, off-key, but completely immersed.
It’s the moment a thought lands in the notebook without effort, like it had been waiting all day for just the right page.
It’s when I look up from the guitar, or the walk, or the writing, and realize time has passed—but I wasn’t measuring it. I was meeting it.
And in those moments, I don’t feel like I owned time.
I feel like I was in relationship with it.
How We Try to Connect
Most of us crave connection with time.
We want to feel aligned. Focused. Present.
We want to use it well. Feel it fully. Make it count.
So we reach for tools and strategies. We make plans, block calendars, optimize our workflows. And we do all of this not just because we’re obsessed with efficiency—but because we want to feel connected to our lives.
That’s the paradox: even ownership is an attempt at connection.
We want to hold time tightly because it slips through so easily.
We want to possess it because we’re scared of losing it.
So we call it “my time.”
We try to “manage” it.
We track it. Spend it. Save it.
We think if we own it, we’ll finally be in sync with it.
But here’s the problem: ownership is a fragile connection.
It’s conditional. Transactional. It requires dominance.
And time doesn’t want to be dominated.
The Illusion of Ownership
To own something is to assert control over it.
To define it. Protect it. Use it for your benefit.
There are things that make sense to own: a home, a jacket, a domain name.
Ownership can bring security, responsibility, even freedom.
But time?
Time doesn’t play by those rules.
It keeps moving, regardless of what we do.
Time refuses to be stockpiled.
It can’t be returned or traded.
And it certainly doesn’t care about our five-year plans.
The more tightly we grip it, the more it resists.
The more we try to master it, the more we lose our presence within it.
This is the dissonance I’ve been sitting with:
We want to be connected to time, but we often reach for that connection through the lens of ownership—and that lens distorts everything.
Connection Through Relationship
There’s another way to be connected to time.
It’s softer. Stranger. It doesn’t show up in dashboards or pie charts.
It’s called relationship.
To be in relationship with something is to listen to it, respond to it, and notice how it moves and shifts and shows up. And to honor the way it changes you.
Relationship is mutual.
It asks something of you, but it also offers something back.
It’s not about using time—it’s about participating in it.
You don’t schedule relationship.
You show up for it.
This is what I mean when I talk about time devotion.
Not worship. Not rigidity.
But attention. Presence. Reverence.
Not every moment needs to be optimized.
Some moments just need to be witnessed.
Why This Is So Hard
This idea can feel uncomfortable. Especially if you’ve spent years trying to be productive. Especially if your calendar is full and your goals are clear and your metrics are working.
It feels like heresy to say:
“You don’t need to own your time.”
But maybe that discomfort is exactly what needs examining.
Because the same systems that promise efficiency often create brittleness.
They shatter when the unexpected enters, turn inward when life moves sideways, and offer control—but not connection.
Relationship, on the other hand, builds resilience.
When you’re in relationship with time, you expect shifts.
You adjust with it. Notice the season you’re in.
And you tune your expectations accordingly.
That’s not giving up. That’s growing up—into a deeper kind of attention.
The Shape of Time Changes
Some days will feel crystalline and structured.
Others will feel murky and nonlinear.
Some hours invite focus.
Others call for rest. Or play. Or grief.
When we try to “own” time, we impose a single shape on all of it.
When we’re in relationship with it, we let it show us its many shapes—and we respond in kind.
You don’t need to love every moment.
You just need to meet it as it is.
This is the tolerance I’ve written about before—not the kind that tolerates abuse or overload, but the kind that accepts imprecision, ambiguity, and variation. The kind that builds range.
A Quiet Invitation
I’m not telling you to throw away your calendar.
I’m not saying structure has no place.
But I am asking you to look at the form your connection with time takes.
Is it based on ownership? Or relationship?
Are you trying to hold it… or hold on to it?
Does your approach allow time to change shape? Or does it break under pressure?
Maybe the most radical thing you can do this week isn’t to optimize.
Maybe it’s to pay attention.
To listen. Notice. Soften your grip.
Because time doesn’t need to be owned to be felt.
And connection doesn’t need to be controlled to be real.
What if the next phase of productivity isn’t about mastery… but about presence?
What if knowing your time is more powerful than owning it?
What if devotion is enough?