Click here to get a FREE copy of Eric’s Book ‘How To Scale or Sell Your Closely-Held Business’

The Overscheduled Life – and How to Avoid it

The Overscheduled Life – and How to Avoid it

I love being busy. In fact, there is nothing much more energizing for me than a day of meeting with clients, and helping them achieve their goals.

But I learned long ago that the next meeting tends to go a lot better if I’m not rushing headlong from the meeting before it. So, for quite some time, I made sure to leave at least 15 minutes, and preferably half an hour, between meetings, and made sure that those who handled my calendar knew to do that, too.

More recently, I’ve allocated specific days and hours to client meetings. Other hours to deal with issues my team needs my help with. And time to shut my office door, focus, and think – on client-specific problems to solve, and the trajectory of our firm.

In my opinion, it’s not a good idea to lock ourselves into a full calendar for months in advance – do that, and we can’t say ‘yes’ when a friend offers us concert tickets. And then we will have a lot of schedule-juggling to do when a long-standing client – or a new one, for that matter – comes to us for help with an urgent matter.

Socrates famously said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” But it was Naval Ravikant, founder of Epinions, who said, “The overscheduled life is not worth living.”

If our days are spent rushing from one task to another, if our calendars look like tennis tournament brackets, we’re rushing too much, taking on more than we ought to in one day. And our mental and physical lives will be poorer for it, although we may have a little more money in the bank – for now.

Rather than letting our calendars running our lives, maybe we should run them. Calendars are our tools, not our masters. As we schedule ourselves, let’s do so reasonably and with mindfulness. Our focus and our work will be all the better for it.

We should also remember the importance of free time, not just for vacations, but every day. We earn our free time with our hard work. If we look at it like that, free time is part of our compensation package, in the larger sense. We wouldn’t work for free, so why should we work for no free time?

How do you avoid overscheduling yourself? What techniques or strategies have worked best for you?

Please click here to email me directly – I would love to hear your stories – and maybe get a few tips!

Until next Wednesday –

Peace,

Eric

Suggested Posts

Charitable Contribution Deductions in 2026: How to Give Strategically and Protect the Tax Benefit

The new year brings with it new charitable contributions limits for 2026, as well as imposing new rules on the

Read More

2026 Tax Brackets: What’s Changed and How to Plan Your Q1 Tax Strategy

The IRS has announced the 2026 income tax brackets; thresholds have increased by ~2.22%, compared with ~2,8% for 2025, ~5.4%

Read More

Happy New Year to All of You!

The stage is set, and the new year is always the star. We’ll kiss 2025 goodbye tomorrow night, we’ll toast

Read More

Sign up for our weekly emails!

Financial and tax planning tips and important updates from Rigby Financial Group – delivered right to your inbox!

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name*

Sign up for our weekly emails!

Financial and tax planning tips and important updates from Rigby Financial Group – delivered right to your inbox!

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name*