Time: The Rarest Commodity on Earth

“Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes.”—James 4:14 (NIV)
Here’s a riddle for you:
This thing all things devours;
birds, beasts, trees, flowers;
gnaws iron, bites steel;
grinds hard stones to meal;
slays king, ruins town,
and beats mountain down.
The answer: TIME
That riddle from The Hobbit eloquently describes the reality of time. There are very few things in this world as precious as time. Think about it: You only get one chance at every second. Once it’s gone, you can’t get it back. There’s no rewind button on life. There’s not even a pause button! It just keeps going and going . . . until it doesn’t.
Time is so unique, so vastly different from other resources in this world. It’s one of our most important and valuable gifts, but it’s also the easiest to waste. In general, people waste a lot of time. According to a recent study, 87% of students procrastinate on school assignments, 95% of adults procrastinate on work and home tasks, and more than 20% of people are considered chronic procrastinators.
Another study concluded that the average American spends their 24-hour day like this:
- About 4.5 hours on their phone with just over 2.5 of those hours on social media
- Almost three hours watching TV
- 295 minutes are spent working
- Less than 420 minutes sleeping (less than the recommended 8 hours)
- Around 68 minutes eating
- Close to 45 minutes in the bathroom