4000 Weeks: Embracing Limits for a Fuller Life

Apr 27, 2024

Ever feel like you’re hurtling through life, desperately trying to cram everything in before it’s too late? Oliver Burkeman’s book “Four Thousand Weeks” aims to help you (4000 weeks is 80 years, the average human lifespan). But it’s not your typical time management book. It’s a philosophical and practical look at why you’re stuck in the hamster wheel of “getting things done.”

I read it recently. So let’s take a deeper look at it and it’s ideas.

And stick around until the end, as I’ve created an 8 week plan on how to put those ideas into action and improve your life 4000 weeks 🚀

The efficiency trap

We’re obsessed with efficiency. Apps, to-do lists, life hacks – we’ll try anything to squeeze more into our days. But here’s the kicker: it’s a trap. The more efficient you become, the more you pile on. It’s like trying to outrun your own shadow.

This “efficiency trap” is a hamster wheel to nowhere. You run faster and faster, but you’re still stuck in the same damn cage.

“The problem with trying to make time for everything that feels important…is that you definitely never will.”

Creative neglect

So what’s the alternative? Embrace your limitations. Accept that you can’t do it all. Choose your battles. Burkeman calls it “creative neglect.”

This means saying “no” more often. Saying “no” to the things that don’t matter, so you can say “hell yes” to the things that do. It means prioritising ruthlessly, focusing on what truly matters, and letting the rest go.

“If you don’t save a bit of your time for you, now, out of every week, there is no moment in the future when you’ll magically be done with everything and have loads of free time.” - Jessica Abel, quoted in Four Thousand Weeks

The antidote to our speed addiction

We’re addicted to speed. We want everything now. But life doesn’t work that way. Good things take time. Relationships take time. Creativity takes time.

Patience is the antidote to our speed addiction. It’s about slowing down, being present, and appreciating the journey. It’s about resisting the urge to rush and allowing things to unfold at their own pace.

“The experience of patience…gives things a kind of chewiness…into which you can sink your teeth.”

The joy of missing

We’re terrified of missing out. FOMO is the plague of our generation. But here’s the secret: missing out is inevitable. You can’t do everything. You can’t be everywhere. And that’s okay.

Embrace the FOMO. It’s what makes your choices meaningful. It’s what gives your life its unique flavour.

“It’s precisely the fact that I could have chosen a different and perhaps equally valuable way to spend this afternoon that bestows meaning on the choice I did make.”

Time is a shared experience

We’re obsessed with individual achievement. But we forget that we’re social creatures. We need each other. We thrive in community.

Time is a shared experience. It’s about synchronising with others, falling into rhythm, and creating a sense of belonging. It’s about participating in rituals, traditions, and collective endeavours that bind us together.

“The more Swedes who were off work simultaneously, the happier people got…as if an intangible, supernatural cloud of relaxation had settled over the nation as a whole.”

This is It

We avoid thinking about death. It’s uncomfortable. It’s scary. But denying it doesn’t make it go away.

Confronting your mortality is a wake-up call. It’s a reminder that this is it. This is your one shot at life. So stop wasting it on things that don’t matter.

“We are the sum of all the moments of our lives…we cannot escape it or conceal it.” - Thomas Wolfe, quoted in Four Thousand Weeks

Freedom in acceptance

Giving up hope might sound depressing, but it’s actually liberating. It means accepting the reality of your limitations and the uncertainty of life.

It’s about letting go of the illusion of control and embracing the present moment. It’s about doing what you can, with what you have, where you are.

“Abandoning hope is an affirmation, the beginning of the beginning.” - Pema Chödrön, quoted in Four Thousand Weeks

8 Weeks For Living 4000 Weeks

“Four Thousand Weeks” is about embracing your limitations, choosing your battles, living with intention and finding joy in the present moment. It’s about making your 4000 weeks count. Now try this 8-week experiment inspired by the book to achieve all those things.

Week 1: Done, not doing

Week 2: Time is yours, claim it

Week 3: Stillness is the new hustle

Week 4: Enjoy the ride

Week 5: Give now

Week 6: The everyday is extraordinary

Week 7: Get curious about the humans around you

Week 8: Discomfort is your gym

Beyond 8 weeks: living a finite life to the fullest

This 8-week experiment is just a little taste of what’s possible when you embrace your limited, not unlimited, potential and prioritise what matters.

Keep exploring, keep experimenting, and keep making your 4000 weeks count.

And if you like Oliver Burkeman’s ideas don’t forget to buy the book and subscribe to his newsletter.

✴️ Also on Micro.blog