Time seems to have a Jevons paradox of its own: A more efficient use of time leads to more things to do, so we never actually get less busy. Like resources, time is one of those things where there never seems to be quite enough. There is always too little or too much, with corresponding feelings of stress or boredom. That Goldilocks sweet spot where there is enough time feels more like an emotional or spiritual determination than an economic one.
Our disjointed relationship with time comes from this economic-centered culture we’ve been indoctrinated into. We’ve been taught to believe that we, individual humans in the capitalist economy, are the arbiters of how much time things ought to take. We adamantly refuse to situate ourselves in a broader ecological context, to allow the cycles of nature and evolution to govern the flows of time. It’s not our fault, of course. We refuse because our economy forces us, because it conditions us not to.
Everything is at the mercy of some arbitrary goal of sameness and efficiency, which above all serves the ticking of the clock.
At the same time, conformity has its uses. It creates mutually navigable spaces, shared rules that become infrastructure, and the same is true of the clock. But I don’t want to “reclaim” time from the clock-oppressor. I want to integrate and dance between the clock and the organic rhythms that move the world. The clock hasn’t stolen time from me, so I don’t need to claim it back.
The clock has a right to some of my time. It organizes it. It makes possible coordination and therefore also exchange, care, and cooperation. To claim my time as wholly my own would be wildly selfish and economically naive. I am my relationships, so my time belongs to those networks of reciprocity, not to an isolated self.
If anything, a healthy relationship with time requires relinquishing control over it. Sometimes my body sets the pace, sometimes the rhythms of nature do, and sometimes I must synchronize with someone else’s timing. A well-being economy depends on honoring these layered tempos—biological, ecological, relational—not just the metric of output.
Our greatest struggle may be too much agency, not too little of it. We are told to optimize every hour as if time were private capital. Without these organic, dependable relationships of trust, we try to self-manage every minute. With it, a deep feeling of anxiety follows: We’re constantly agitated, bored, stressed, rushed, trying to skip ahead to the future or return to the past. We attempt to construct realities in midair, ungrounded from the realities that sustain us.
I feel this in the urgency around social causes like climate change. Yes, of course, time matters, but cultures, economies, and collective psychosocial functioning do not transform at the speed of news cycles. When has anything natural ever moved at such a speed? Our urgency is well-meaning in a sense, but also self-interested. It’s an urge to see the fruits of the change happen in a timeframe that we, personally, can benefit from. So work of responding to this moment is not found in ever-increasing acceleration, but in rebuilding an economic life where well-being and the health of the earth are central.
But making such changes is difficult, and far from guaranteed.