El Tiempo Que Tenemos ((top))

The Spanish also give us "Sobremesa" —the art of lingering at the table after a meal. It is a deliberate, sacred waste of Chronos to enrich Kairos. When we practice sobremesa, we declare: My time with you is more important than my next appointment.

We live in an era of unprecedented convenience. We have apps to save us minutes and machines to do our chores, yet we feel more "time-poor" than ever. This is the paradox: the more we try to optimize our time, the more we feel its pressure. El Tiempo Que Tenemos

is the time right now . Not yesterday (which is a memory). Not tomorrow (which is a fantasy). The only time you truly possess is this present breath. The Spanish also give us "Sobremesa" —the art

When you say "I'll do that soon," ask: If I knew I had only one year left, would I do this next week? If the answer is no, cancel it. If the answer is yes, schedule it. Now. We live in an era of unprecedented convenience

This guide covers the 2024 film El Tiempo Que Tenemos (English title: We Live in Time

If you treat as a resource to be maximized, you will never have enough. The person who crams 20 tasks into a day feels rushed. The person who does 3 important tasks feels fulfilled.

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