Planning feels productive.
You map things out. You organize. You prepare.
It gives you a sense of control.
But there’s a limit to how much planning actually helps.
The Illusion of Control
Plans assume predictability.
Life rarely follows that script.
Unexpected things happen. Energy shifts. Priorities change.
Over-Planning Creates Pressure
When your plan is too rigid, any deviation feels like failure.
That pressure can make you avoid starting altogether.
A More Flexible Approach
Instead of planning every detail, focus on direction.
That’s where a mytime target comes in.
It gives you a general sense of where your time should go, without forcing exact outcomes.
Working With Reality
Flexibility doesn’t mean chaos.
It means adapting.
You adjust your actions while keeping your intention intact.
Final Thought
Plans are useful.
But direction is more important.
Author: Ethan Cole