In 1967, experts on time management delivered a report to the U. S. Senate. These experts believed the speed of technology, satellites, and robotics would present a big problem for the American workplace in the years to come. The problem? People would have too much free time: “By 1985, people might have to choose between working 22 hours a week, 27 weeks a year, or retiring at 38.” The “experts” nailed that one. Increased speeds in technology have, in fact, decreased free time. The experts didn’t anticipate us filling in the productivity gaps with…more productivity. But we did. And today, we’re addicted to speed. This addiction is so prevalent, it’s been given a name: hurry sickness.
Hurry sickness is defined as “a continuous struggle to accomplish more things and participate in more events in less time, frequently in the face of opposition, real or imagined, from other people.“
If you’ve ever laid on the horn because the person in front of you didn’t turn fast enough or changed aisles at the grocery store because another aisle had fewer people, you might suffer with hurry sickness.
Let’s be honest, our pace is unhealthy. We accomplish more in less time, but at what cost?
Look at the life of Jesus. Do you find it strange that he never rushed? He didn’t cater to the world’s demands. Even though he had an enormous mission to complete in a short period of time, he was never overwhelmed or anxious.
Jesus had the weight of the world on his shoulders, literally, but he didn’t allow it to crush him.
Could it be that faster doesn’t equal better? Is it possible that the fast life doesn’t lead to the good life? I think so. Hurriedness isn’t from God. As psychiatrist Carl Jung said, “Hurry is not OF the devil. Hurry IS the devil.”
Before we get started, I don’t want you to think I’m waging war against productivity or speed. Usain Bolt might be my favorite athlete ever. I can’t imagine a world without planes and computers. I’m waging war against hurriedness, the idolatrous result of bowing down to speed and productivity.
Here are 5 things a speed sickness costs us.
1. A hurried life prevents us from knowing God.
Last night, I read a book to my boys called Where Is God? The words hit me hard, so much so that I read them again after the boys went to sleep. Listen to this.
“Where is God…God is in the beginning…in the tiny hands of a baby…Where is God?…God is in the end…in the last bite of birthday cake…Where is God? God is in the world…God is everywhere…wherever we look.”
A hurried world has no time for looking, no space to notice God. Life is about the next thing, the next event, the next item on our to-do list.
As long as we move at this speed, we shouldn’t wonder why our relationship with God suffers.
God is wherever we look, but are we looking for Him?
2. A hurried life decreases compassion and empathy.
Compassion and empathy are similar, but different. Compassion sees the suffering or pain of another person and has a desire to help. Empathy sees the emotions of another person and feels the same thing.
Compassion and empathy disappear in hurried cultures. Rather than helping our neighbor or listening to our hurting friend or co-worker, we resort to “pick up your boot straps” and “get over it” attitudes, the very opposite of Jesus.
Jesus always made space for compassion, regardless of the demands around him. He welcomed children, fed thousands of hungry people, and was continually side-tracked to heal the sick and talk with outcasts.
How frustrating would Jesus have been for an event planner?
What do you feel when you see someone hurting? What’s your response to someone with a different perspective? What about the outcasts and marginalized? Are you more inclined to stop and listen or judge them for not trying hard enough, making bad choices, etc.?
3. A hurried life increases anxiety, depression, and addiction.
Through my American lens, it seems like Jesus wasted most of his life. He was baptized at the age of 30, and immediately after went into the wilderness for 40 days?
Jesus could have performed miracles long before 30, and his following might have been larger. Who knows, more people might know Jesus today if he started his ministry earlier.
That’s a no-brainer, God. Maybe you need an expert on time-management to help you steward the life of Jesus?
What’s that, God?…Yeah, you made the stars…Yeah, you were here long before me…You’re right, having someone you created consult you sounds silly.
The 30 years Jesus spent in obscurity weren’t wasted years. God was developing important virtues in Jesus…patience and self-control.
Temptation is, in essence, a decrease in the time between impulse and action. It should come as no surprise that anxiety, depression, and addiction plague a hurried culture. “Even instant gratification takes too long,” as actress Carrie Fisher once said.
Tell us to wait or wrestle with tension and pain rather than medicate it, and you might as well told us to backhand slap a baby.
Could it be the 30 years prior to Jesus’s ministry and the 40 days in the wilderness created a gap between impulse and action so wide he was never mentally or spiritually capable of sin? Not to say Jesus wasn’t physical susceptible to attack, but when Satan approached him, he was seasoned with years of patience and self-control, preventing his mind and heart from acting on the physical impulses.
If so, maybe it’s time we stopped looking at obscurity and wilderness, tension and pain as negatives.
4. A hurried life destroys meaningful relationships.
Much of what makes life meaningful, friendships, family, and community, need the very thing hurried people don’t have: time.
Busyness strangles, meaningful, life-giving friendships. Hurried people simply don’t have the space to maintain friendships or invest in building new ones.
I’ve seen this in my life. Between work, kids, and family, I’ll go weeks, months even, without calling my best friends…and not even realize it.
Marriage is also greatly affected by hurriedness. “Love is patient,” the first component listed in 1 Corinthians 13. Love isn’t rushed. It doesn’t come to fruition over night. Great marriages, the ones I see looking at my grandparents, the ones filled with peace and joy and hope, they take years. But, let’s be honest, we don’t have years. And I wonder how many divorces and broken homes are the product of impatience?
Then there’s kids. Kids might suffer more than anyone from our lust-filled affair with busyness and hurry. As a father of two, I feel it’s my duty to protect my boys from boredom. But, today, as they put socks on their hands, running frantically through the house trying to catch a flying monster, I wondered if I needed a 3 and 4-year-old to protect me.
Carefree timelessness is the oxygen that keeps meaningful relationship alive, and the birthplace of wonder, joy, and creativity.
Carefree timelessness is the birthplace of wonder, joy, and creativity.
5. A hurried life leads to a superficial, meaningless existence.
“Purpose” is a trendy word in today’s culture, and rightfully so, we were created for something larger than ourselves. But in a hurried world, a purposeful life is more elusive than the Loch Ness Monster.
Here’s why: Your purpose is unique to you. It’s an outpouring of your passion and gifts. Uncovering these requires introspection, looking inside yourself. It requires stillness and time with God. Busy people have no time for introspection and stillness, and the result is a world of copy-cats and posers. A hurried world would rather imitate someone than become the unique men and women God created us to be.
We can be sure we’re moving at an unhealthy speed when we’re more concerned with what we’re doing than who we’re becoming, more concerned with external validation than integrity.
And we can be sure a meaningless, self-seeking existence awaits us unless we learns to slow down.
Your life’s pace matters. And I don’t believe the costs of a hurried life are worth the rewards. The fast isn’t necessarily the good life. A more productive life isn’t necessarily a more meaningful one.
This article originally appeared here, and is used by permission.