Why You Always Feel Out of Time — Even When You Control Your Schedule A recent Pew Research Center survey captured a painful reality for working parents: 60% of full-time working parents feel they don’t spend enough time with their children, nearly 60% say the same about their partners, and women report even higher pressure, with roughly three-quarters lacking enough time for hobbies or relaxation. Technology, remote work, and constant connectivity certainly blur boundaries. But for knowledge workers—who have significant autonomy over their schedules—there’s a deeper, often overlooked cause: **unclear value creation**. When you’re not crystal clear on which activities generate the most value, urgency becomes the default filter. Emails, meetings, requests, and admin tasks all feel equally important. Your calendar fills up, yet the work that truly moves the needle gets squeezed into evenings, weekends, or “someday.” The result isn’t just lower impact—it’s the exhausting sense that there’s never enough time. The Turning Point Most Knowledge Workers Miss Early in my career, I tried to do everything well. Every responsibility felt equally urgent. I was busy, responsive, and perpetually drained. The shift came when I realized I wasn’t hired to do *everything*—I was hired to **create value**. Once I identified where I contributed the most, my decision-making changed. I stopped treating every task with equal importance and started protecting time for what mattered most. I didn’t magically gain more hours, but I reclaimed many that had been wasted on low-value work. If you’re a working parent in a knowledge role and you want to reclaim your time, skip another generic productivity hack. Focus on these three strategic shifts instead: 1. Clarify How You Create Value Not all work is equal. Some tasks keep the lights on. Others create disproportionate impact. - A salesperson creates outsized value by winning new business. - A researcher does it by generating insights that drive key decisions. - A nonprofit leader does it by securing funding and building strategic partnerships. Job descriptions rarely highlight what matters most. That clarity comes from honest reflection, conversations with your manager and peers, and understanding how your unique strengths serve organizational goals. Without this clarity, you default to responsiveness. High-value work gets postponed while reactive tasks multiply. 2. Allocate More Time to High-Value Work Most of us were trained in time *management*. Far fewer have learned how to organize time around *value*. I used to live in my inbox, sit through endless meetings, and travel constantly. These activities crowded out the work that actually created impact—like developing new insights and concepts that expanded our organization’s reach. Drawing from Cal Newport’s ideas on deep work, I flipped the 80/20 rule: I began fiercely protecting blocks of time for the small set of activities that produced the majority of my value. The constant context-switching between work and family eased. I started feeling more in control rather than perpetually behind. 3. Become Exceptional at What Creates Value Finally, invest in excellence. This requires sustained, uninterrupted focus—time to think deeply, learn, and practice. I began blocking regular daytime hours for reading, writing, and idea development instead of pushing them into personal time. At first, I worried about seeming unresponsive. Instead, my focused expertise led to more meaningful opportunities and fewer low-value demands. My work became more coherent, context-switching decreased, and people increasingly sought me out for the things I did best. The Outcome You won’t eliminate every orthodontist appointment or contractor visit. Life will still collide with work. But by getting clear on your highest-value contributions and organizing your schedule around them, you remove one of the biggest hidden sources of time pressure. Knowledge workers don’t reclaim their time by managing minutes more efficiently. They reclaim it by becoming ruthlessly clear about where they create the greatest value—and then building their days around that reality. Working parents who master this don’t just feel less busy. They feel more present, more effective, and more in control of the life they actually want to lead.
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