How to Find 5 Extra Hours a Day (without losing sleep, skipping meals, multitasking or abandoning your family)

When was the last time you complained there just weren’t enough hours in the day for all you wanted to accomplish? If you’re like me, it was recently. And if like me, you regularly run out of day at the end of your to-do list.

More importantly, what would you do with those additional 5 hours a day?


Would you spend them pursuing a dream? Working toward a goal? Doing something you love?

Well, the good news is that if you’re much like the national average, I can actually add another 4.8 hours to your life every single day. For free. And it won’t require DNA replacement therapy, magic, or becoming mentally ambidextrous.

That’s 34 hours a week, or 136 hours most months and 1,768 hours a year. That’s a whopping 8,840 hours in just 5 years’ time and 17,680 hours in a decade. And those of you on the downward slope of the average lifespan understand just how short a decade truly is!

When was the last time you complained there just weren’t enough hours in the day for all you wanted to accomplish? If you’re like me, it was recently. And if like me, you regularly run out of day at the end of your to-do list.

– See more at: http://meanttobehappy.com/how-to-find-5-extra-hours-a-day-without-losing-sleep-skipping-meals-multitasking-or-abandioning-your-family/#sthash.ClhzgOdj.dpuf

When was the last time you complained there just weren’t enough hours in the day for all you wanted to accomplish? If you’re like me, it was recently. And if like me, you regularly run out of day at the end of your to-do list.

But what if by some mutant change to my DNA, I evolved the power to manipulate time and could pass that power to you so that you could add nearly 5 more hours to your day? How much would you pay for that? (don’t worry, I’m not charging!)

More importantly, what would you do with those additional 5 hours a day?

Would you spend them pursuing a dream? Working toward a goal? Doing something you love?

Well, the good news is that if you’re much like the national average, I can actually add another 4.8 hours to your life every single day. For free. And it won’t require DNA replacement therapy, magic, or becoming mentally ambidextrous.

That’s 34 hours a week, or 136 hours most months and 1,768 hours a year. That’s a whopping 8,840 hours in just 5 years’ time and 17,680 hours in a decade. And those of you on the downward slope of the average lifespan understand just how short a decade truly is!

– See more at: http://meanttobehappy.com/how-to-find-5-extra-hours-a-day-without-losing-sleep-skipping-meals-multitasking-or-abandioning-your-family/#sthash.ClhzgOdj.dpuf

When was the last time you complained there just weren’t enough hours in the day for all you wanted to accomplish? If you’re like me, it was recently. And if like me, you regularly run out of day at the end of your to-do list.

But what if by some mutant change to my DNA, I evolved the power to manipulate time and could pass that power to you so that you could add nearly 5 more hours to your day? How much would you pay for that? (don’t worry, I’m not charging!)

More importantly, what would you do with those additional 5 hours a day?

Would you spend them pursuing a dream? Working toward a goal? Doing something you love?

Well, the good news is that if you’re much like the national average, I can actually add another 4.8 hours to your life every single day. For free. And it won’t require DNA replacement therapy, magic, or becoming mentally ambidextrous.

That’s 34 hours a week, or 136 hours most months and 1,768 hours a year. That’s a whopping 8,840 hours in just 5 years’ time and 17,680 hours in a decade. And those of you on the downward slope of the average lifespan understand just how short a decade truly is!

– See more at: http://meanttobehappy.com/how-to-find-5-extra-hours-a-day-without-losing-sleep-skipping-meals-multitasking-or-abandioning-your-family/#sthash.ClhzgOdj.dpuf

Vicki Kossoff @ The Learning Factor‘s insight:

Time is free, but it’s priceless. You can’t own it, but you can use it. You can’t keep it, but you can spend it.

See on meanttobehappy.com

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