How to Master Your Time

The sky was blood-red as smoke curled into the air. The village square was in ruins, and above the flames, a wooden scaffold stood tall. Bound and helpless, Aarya dangled from it—ropes cutting into her wrists, fire licking the base of the structure

From the hilltop, Veer saw it. His heart clenched.

There was no time to think. No time to plan. She was the one person he couldn’t afford to lose.

He sprinted.

But as he reached the edge of the square, a thunder of boots shook the ground. Soldiers of the rival empire blocked his path—blades drawn, Armor gleaming.

Ten of them. Trained. Armed.

Veer had only minutes before the fire reached the rope.

He had a choice:
Fight them all and possibly lose time—or
Focus only on what truly mattered: saving Aarya.

He gritted his teeth and sprinted straight into them—not to fight, but to dodge. He ducked a sword swipe, rolled beneath a spear, and used the chaos against them. He didn’t need to defeat them. He just had to outmanoeuvre them.

His goal wasn’t victory.
It was her life.

He was bruised, slashed, out of breath—but he made it to the scaffold. Flames were already catching the ropes.

With shaking hands, he cut the binds. Aarya collapsed into his arms, barely conscious.

“You’re late,” she whispered, smiling weakly.

Veer chuckled, lifting her up. “Never for you.”

The soldiers closed in, but he found a back alley—a hidden path from childhood memories. He slipped away, vanishing into the smoke.

The Secret to Master Your Time

The secret to master your time is to focus on what is important and suppress urgency.

Humans are biologically wired to respond to urgent stimuli—like phone notifications, messages, alarms, or sudden tasks. These trigger a dopamine response in the brain, giving us the illusion of productivity and action.

But here’s the catch, most of these urgent things are not actually important. And most of the important things in life – like exercising, learning a skill, building relationships – don’t scream for attention.

So we end up:

  • Answering every buzz, but ignoring our health.
  • Scrolling endlessly, but skipping personal growth.
  • Reacting all day, but never acting on long-term goals.

This is what psychologists call the “urgency effect” — where we prioritize what feels immediate over what is truly meaningful.

To break free, you must go against your instincts.
You have to consciously choose what’s important before it becomes urgent — even if it feels uncomfortable, boring, or invisible right now.

It’s not easy.
It goes against your brain.
It goes against the way society operates.
But it’s the only way to live a life that’s not just busy, but purposeful.

Here’s How to Fix That

Schedule Your Priorities

Humans are funny creatures. If you have dinner with a family, you’ll set a time and place. But if you’re trying to write a novel, build a business or get fit – you’ll say ‘I’ll get around to it’. Treat your goals like flights you can’t afford to miss. Set a time. Show up. Say no to anything that makes you late.

Say No

When someone asks you to do something you almost say yes. In the feel of being noble we almost forget that we have to save our love (Aarya) from fire. So you may need to sacrifice some social comfort to save a life.

Kill Notifications

Today’s Modern Technology has evolved to exploit our urgency addition: Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and many more. But we have one easy option to keep us away from distracting by turning off the notifications. Choose to check things when you have enough time to waste after completing all the important tasks.

First Things

Ask yourself every morning: “What’s the single most important (not urgent) thing I could be doing today?”

Do that.
Before checking the messages, emails or scrolling reels. Before the errands. Before the distractions disguised as duties.
Stormtroopers are infinite. Time isn’t.
Stop saying, “Let me just finish this first.”
Jedi don’t make excuses.

Less Volume, More Focus

You could do a million things today. But Don’t. Pick 1 to 3 truly important things. And Do them with your full attention.
Focus beats multitasking every time.

Ignore

Yes, it’s rude to ignore messages, reply late but it’s necessary. You’ll miss some calls, you might pay that bill a day late. But you will end up doing what was important.

Conclusion

In a world full of noise, urgency, and endless demand, your time is your most precious resource – and the one thing you can never get back.

Distractions will always be there. Excuses will always sound reasonable. But your dreams? They won’t wait forever.

Live with intention. Act like a Jedi. And remember – you don’t need more time. You need to start using it on what matters the most.

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