Subtitles section Play video
-
This video was made possible by The Great Courses Plus.
-
If there's one thing I've obsessed about over the past ten years, It's how to squeeze more out of each day.
-
At my peak in time efficiency, I was doing plastic surgery residency, working 80 hours in the hospital,
-
then going home to study and prepare for presentations.
-
I was concurrently building two businesses:
-
Blue LINC, a medtech incubator, and Med School Insiders, this YouTube channel and the much larger business behind it.
-
And I started a second YouTube channel for vlogging as well.
-
I also cycled 6 days per week, lifted weights 4 times per week, and was starting a new relationship.
-
Seem impossible?
-
Here's how I did it, and how you too can master time management.
-
Dr. Jubbal, MedSchoolInsiders.com.
-
Approximately ten years ago, my health took a big turn for the worse, and I had a hard wake up call that life is short.
-
And if life is short, I better maximize each moment.
-
That means I'm either working tirelessly toward leaving my impact on the world, or enjoying and cherishing the pleasure of being alive.
-
Being a tyrant with your time and achieving maximal time efficiency is not just about working non-stop.
-
By being more efficient with your time, you can actually have more time to hang out with your friends,
-
watch a movie, or relax in any other way you deem worthwhile.
-
This is the first and foundational principle to being maximally effective, time efficient, and productive.
-
Spend your time working all out or playing all out,
-
but never that nonsense in the middle where you try to do both at the same time.
-
Have you ever tried to do work while in front of the TV, watching the game?
-
Your effectiveness in work is highly compromised, and you're not fully enjoying the game either.
-
It's simply not a good use of your time, so don't do it.
-
There's nothing special about me and being able to do this -
-
I just applied myself to this problem with a tremendous amount of persistence and effort.
-
Building from these foundational principles,
-
I've developed several other strategies that have allowed me to do things that others in my field said was impossible.
-
I've lost count of how many people have asked me how I get so much done in each day.
-
And if you follow these steps, you too can get more work done, spend more time having fun, and live a better life.
-
Understanding that we each have the same 24 hours in a day is a sobering realization.
-
Despite having the same amount of time each day, how can two people have such divergent results?
-
This isn't a call to arms in saying that you need to be working harder. This is a wake up call that in life, we have seasons.
-
I spent years trying to find the ever elusive work-life balance, only to realize it doesn't exist.
-
Rather, it's a constantly changing work-life harmony that we always dance with in the greater context of our lives.
-
Don't be afraid to have some seasons of grinding and working hard, particularly during your teens and twenties.
-
If anything, this will put you ahead of your peers. When I was in surgical residency and concurrently building two businesses,
-
I was at maximal capacity.
-
I had every single minute planned out each day, and I took great pleasure in my work.
-
That being said, it was a shorter season, and I knew I didn't want it for the rest of my life.
-
On the other hand, when I went to Asia for 6 weeks earlier this year,
-
I was only working a couple hours per day,
-
and I knew making the impact I want on the world would take much more time and effort when I returned from my travels.
-
When taking this bird's eye view of your life seasons,
-
it's also crucial to understand that urgency and importance are not the same.
-
Even though getting a workout in isn't urgent, it is important and should be prioritized in your schedule.
-
It has massive compounding effects in your long term health, and can even help you with focus and productivity in the short term.
-
Similarly, a healthy diet isn't urgent, and you aren't going to die from eating Doritos today,
-
but the importance of a balanced diet cannot be overstated.
-
The biggest time management violation that you're committing is lacking presence and focus moment to moment.
-
Splitting your attention between what you should be doing and what is fighting for our attention,
-
such as emails, texts, or DM's, wreaks havoc on both work and play.
-
Maybe you should be studying for organic chemistry
-
but you mindlessly pick up your phone and see if there are any new notifications on Facebook or Instagram.
-
Or maybe you're grabbing dinner with a friend, supposed to be engaged in conversation,
-
but you can't resist the urge to check the notification on your Apple Watch.
-
Have you ever noticed that when it's the day before a deadline,
-
you seem to get more done in 12 hours than you did in the past 12 days?
-
This is Parkinson's Law at play, which states that work expands to fill the time allotted to it.
-
When we have a time constraint or deadline, we find ourselves being more productive –
-
reason being we are forced to maintain focus and are not as prone to being distracted.
-
But the secret is you don't have to wait until the last day to get this boost in productivity.
-
So how can you implement this in your own life?
-
First, tame your devices. I've disabled notification sounds on my phone except for phone calls.
-
The only home screen notifications are certain instant messaging apps,
-
like text messages and Instagram DM's, or important reminders to journal every morning.
-
No email notifications, no notifications about someone liking my post or news updates or any nonsense like that.
-
If you still find yourself distracted, simply place your phone in another room so you aren't tempted to mindlessly pick it up.
-
Second, practice allocating time and setting an intention when you sit down to work.
-
Rather than sitting down to study after class without purpose, set a goal and end time.
-
For example, finish 30 organic chemistry practice problems in the next hour and then read one chapter before dinner at 7PM.
-
Love it or hate it, scheduling is a necessary part of optimal time efficiency.
-
For a long period of time, I scheduled my gym sessions first thing in the morning.
-
After all, it's what Jocko Willink does, and he's the embodiment of discipline and badassery.
-
But there's a cost to starting your day with exercise.
-
Attention spans are limited, and deep work can only be done for short spurts of a few hours at most.
-
Therefore telling myself I would gym from 7-9AM and work from 9AM to 6PM with only a break for lunch wasn't maximally effective
-
and it wasn't optimized for my desired outcomes.
-
Instead, I now practice a daily schedule that has been optimized for the results I seek.
-
First, I want to prioritize important but non-urgent tasks, like journaling, meditation, or working out.
-
Second, I want to prioritize high quality work rather than extended periods of medium quality work.
-
And third, I wanna target 8-9 hours of sleep per night.
-
My morning is structured first with non-urgent but important tasks, like journaling, meditation, stretching,
-
testing my HRV, brushing my teeth, and the like.
-
Immediately after, my mind is fresh,
-
so I do a block of focused work – work that requires me to be sharp.
-
After a couple hours, I break my 16/8 intermittent fast with lunch, and then head to the gym.
-
And administrative work block follows in the afternoon, as I usually experience a dip in focus and energy around this time.
-
After an early dinner around 6PM I get to a creative work block,
-
whereby I set the Philips Hue smart lights to something playful, turn on some music, and let the inspiration flow.
-
This is my daily schedule, and I'll be making a more detailed walkthroughs for each part on my Kevin Jubbal, M.D. channel.
-
This is not set in stone, and a schedule optimized for your own day will likely look much different than mine.
-
Back in residency or in medical school, my schedule was drastically different than it is today.
-
The importance doesn't lie in the specifics of my schedule,
-
but rather the deliberate way it came about,
-
first intentionally outlining my desired outcomes and then
-
experimenting for months to find the best schedule to facilitate those outcomes.
-
That being said, there are a few elements to prioritize:
-
First, you cannot focus indefinitely for hours on end.
-
All work should be within dedicated time periods that have a start time, an end time,
-
and a plan on what you want to work on.
-
Number 2. Entropy grows as the day proceeds.
-
Prioritize doing more important or foundational items early in the day.
-
This is why I have my non-urgent but important habits first thing in the morning, followed by focused work.
-
Number 3. Don't compromise on sleep.
-
Even in medical school, I prioritized getting at least 7 hours
-
because it was so readily apparent how much prolonged sleep deprivation blunted my effectiveness.
-
Are there occasional call nights or 36-hour shifts where you don't sleep?
-
Yes, but they should be the exception, not the rule.
-
There will be many moments in which you fail.
-
I still do, after years of obsessing and tweaking my own time optimization. And that's ok.
-
When you inevitably fail, you must not take that to mean you are a failure or that your schedule is not worth it.
-
As you continue to work on your schedule, you'll prioritize the ways of being over the acts of doing.
-
When you approach life this way, you'll take on empowering identities.
-
When you miss a deadline or get distracted,
-
you have two options.
-
Dwell on your inevitable failure or choose in that moment to be something different.
-
Choose to learn from your mistakes, to be the type of person that catches himself in a distracted state, and gets back to work.
-
If you're falling behind schedule and have only 30 minutes rather than 2 hours for your workout,
-
you have two options.
-
Either quit and say “forget it, I don't have enough time to work out today,”
-
or you can say “I've got 30 minutes, how can I make this count?”
-
One is self defeating, and one empowers you to keep moving forward.
-
The impact of striving to stick to your schedule day after day
-
despite the setbacks is how your scheduled tasks become lifelong ways of being.
-
In optimizing your days, learning to spend flexible time intelligently is key.
-
That means when you find yourself with a few spare minutes,
-
learn something interesting and useful, like something from The Great Courses Plus.
-
The Great Courses Plus is a subscription on-demand video learning service with top-quality lectures and courses
-
from excellent professors at top universities and experts from places like National Geographic, The Smithsonian,
-
and the Culinary Institute of America.
-
You can watch on your computer, TV, or even phone, so it's easy to sit back, relax,
-
and learn wherever you are.
-
You get unlimited access to a huge library of over 11,000 video lectures
-
from science, to math, to history, to how to cook, or even how to study more effectively.
-
I've personally been using the Masters of Mindfulness course.
-
As I've mentioned before, mindfulness and meditation practice has multiple benefits that students should take advantage of,
-
and this course provides another avenue to further develop and strengthen this practice.
-
The Great Courses Plus is offering a free trial to viewers of Med School Insiders.
-
Simply visit TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/MedSchoolInsiders to sign up.
-
Click on the link in the description to start your free trial today.
-
Thank you all so much for watching.
-
I feel so incredibly lucky to get to do this every day, and it brings me so much joy
-
when I hear how you're changing and improving your own life.
-
If you have any requests for future videos, let me know with a comment down below.
-
Much love to you all, and I will see you guys in that next one.