How I Work

Why you feel busy all the time (even when you’re not), with Laura Vanderkam

57 snips
May 6, 2026
Laura Vanderkam, time researcher and bestselling author known for long-term time tracking, explains why perceived busyness misleads us. She shares findings from 11 years of diaries and large studies. Short weekly tracking, reclaiming post-dinner “golden hours,” a circus metaphor for organizing complex lives, and a simple weekly planning ritual are the main topics.
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ADVICE

Do One Week Of Time Tracking To Feel Better

  • Track your time for one week to boost time satisfaction; people reported ~18–25% higher scores after a week of tracking.
  • The effect comes from better choices and correcting the negative stories we tell about our weeks.
INSIGHT

Flexible Work Makes People Overcount Work Time

  • Flexible workers tend to overestimate how much they work because evening or weekend work feels worse and so is mentally inflated.
  • Laura notes a 45-minute email session at 9pm often feels like 'working all night' though it's 0.75 hours.
ADVICE

Use Evening Golden Hours With A 30 Minute Intention

  • Rebrand post-work weeknights as 'golden hours' and set one small 30-minute non-work, non-chores intention each evening.
  • Many people have 4–5 usable hours between end of work (~6pm) and bedtime (~10pm).
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