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Why time is life’s most precious commodity Part 1

The irreplaceable currency

22 June 2026
in Health, Lifestyle, OPINION/COMMENTARY, Technology
4 min. read
Francis J Amèdé, MD. Photo: Francis Amèdé
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by Francis Amèdé, MD

In the quiet ticking of a wristwatch or the endless scroll of a smartphone, an unforgiving truth pulses. Time is the one resource we cannot replenish, negotiate, or hoard. Unlike money or materials, it offers no refunds, no extensions, and no second chances.

This finite thread weaves through every human endeavour, birth, love, achievement, regret, and binds us all in its relentless march. In an age when social media devours an average of 2 hours and 21–40 minutes per user globally each day (DataReportal, 2025; Twenge & Campbell, 2019), reclaiming even fractions of this daily allowance could unlock unprecedented personal and collective potential. Time is not merely a dimension; it is the ultimate commodity and the silent architect of existence.

A tapestry of ticking: The historical evolution of time

Humanity’s grasp of time evolved from cyclical observations of sun, moon, and seasons to precise measurement. Ancient Egyptians used water clocks and sundials by 1500 BCE for agriculture and ritual (Whitrow, 1988). Linear conceptions emerged in Judeo-Christian and Islamic traditions, framing time as a directed journey toward judgment or salvation. The Scientific Revolution introduced Newton’s absolute time, later challenged by Einstein’s relativity, in which time dilates with speed and gravity (Bardon, 2013). Philosophers from Aristotle to Kant and Bergson debated its nature, objective measure versus subjective duration, while modern physics ties it to entropy and quantum entanglement (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2022). Today, atomic clocks measure billionths of seconds, yet the deeper paradoxes remain, underscoring time’s centrality to human experience.

What exactly is time?

Time is the dimension that sequences events from past through present to future, the fourth coordinate in spacetime. Psychologically, it stretches in boredom and contracts in flow; neurologically, it emerges from memory, anticipation, and circadian rhythms (Cycleback, 2022). In the social media era, algorithms exploit this elasticity, creating perpetual dopamine loops that distort perceived duration and fragment attention. Philosophically, debates between presentism, eternalism, and growing-block theories challenge our assumptions about reality itself. Recognising time’s visceral reality amid digital distractions sharpens the imperative to use time intentionally.

The profound importance of time

Time contains all other resources. Health, wealth, relationships, and knowledge exist only within its bounds. Prioritising time over money correlates with higher life satisfaction (Hershfield et al., 2020). Its universal equity, 24 hours for all, makes allocation the ultimate determinant of outcomes. In a finite lifespan, every choice carries infinite opportunity cost. This scarcity imbues life with urgency and meaning, compelling prioritisation of the profound over the trivial.

The subtle art of wasting time in the social media age

Social media alone consumes roughly 2.5 hours daily for many, totalling billions of collective hours lost to scrolling, notifications, and comparison (DataReportal, 2025). Procrastination, often rooted in emotional avoidance rather than laziness (Sirois, 2023), compounds this by delaying decisions and fragmenting focus. We multitask, gossip, and chase low-value stimuli, mistaking busyness for progress. Seneca’s ancient warning rings truer today: we guard money but squander time.

Collective Mastery: Efficiency, timeliness, and societal transformation

If governments and citizens systematically embraced efficiency, timeliness, and the suspension of procrastination, societies could transform in months or years rather than decades. Streamlined processes would free vast reservoirs of human energy for higher pursuits.

In healthcare, efficient triage exemplifies the stakes. Delayed ICU admissions from emergency departments increase mortality and resource strain. Studies show that prioritising severity-based triage over chronological order reduces ICU and hospital mortality, shortens length of stay, and optimises scarce bed capacity (Larangeira et al., 2023; Sabry et al., 2023). Rapid, accurate allocation to ICU or floor care saves lives, reduces complications, and conserves resources, directly alleviating societal grief and economic burdens from prolonged loss. Timely medical management turns potential tragedies into recoveries, freeing families for productive rather than grieving time.

Government bureaucracy offers similar leverage. Passport processing delays, often stretching 4–13 weeks or more due to fragmented offices and paperwork, waste citizens’ productive hours and disrupt travel, business, and family plans (US GAO, 2025). Consolidating departments, digitising forms with clear online instructions, and co-locating services could slash processing to days. Citizens reclaiming this time could invest in education, entrepreneurship, or family engagement instead of repeated visits and follow-ups.

When individuals keep promises, deliver products on time, honour appointments, and fulfil commitments, cascading efficiency emerges. Supply chains accelerate, trust builds, and transaction costs plummet. Families gain quality time for meaningful activities: shared meals, skill-building, community service, or restful renewal rather than compensatory rushing. Children absorb discipline and presence, fostering generational gains in emotional health and achievement.

Reducing procrastination through structured habits and accountability multiplies output. Businesses and public institutions adopting tight feedback loops and clear deadlines complete infrastructure, policy implementation, and innovation cycles far faster. A nation embracing these principles could solve entrenched problems in climate adaptation, education reform, and poverty reduction at unprecedented speed. Resources currently burned in inefficiency shift toward breakthroughs in science, arts, and social cohesion. Families flourish with restored presence; communities strengthen through reliable collaboration; economies surge via compounded productivity.

Why time reigns as life’s supreme commodity

Time’s irreversibility sets it apart. Lost wealth or health can often be reclaimed; wasted years cannot. It underpins all value creation. In economic terms, its opportunity cost is absolute. Philosophically, finitude sharpens beauty and authenticity. In a social-media-saturated, procrastination-prone world, mastering time counters illusions of infinite digital abundance. Governments and citizens optimising it could achieve not mere incremental progress but exponential human flourishing, healthier populations, innovative economies, and resilient societies within a single generation.

Embracing the gift

Few on their deathbed regret insufficient wealth; most lament misspent time. By internalising time’s history, essence, and scarcity, and acting through efficient systems, timely actions, and anti-procrastination discipline, we unlock its promise. Cultivate mindfulness, enforce accountability, redesign institutions for speed, and prioritise presence. The quiet urgency of the clock offers liberation: the power to craft lives, communities, and nations of depth, impact, and purpose. Time is not merely life’s commodity; it is life itself.

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