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Home | Oliver Burkeman. A book about the power of. embracing your limitations. "The most important book ever written about time management" – Adam Grant. "Comforting, fascinating, inspiring and… actually genuinely useful" – Marian Keyes. New York Times and Sunday Times bestseller. Learn more >> "Every sentence is riven with gold" – Chris Evans.
- Books
Praise for FOUR THOUSAND WEEKS “ This is the most important...
- Posts
Oliver Burkeman. Books. Posts. The Imperfectionist. About....
- The Imperfectionist
Unsubscribe at any time. A book about embracing your...
- About
I'm Oliver Burkeman, author of The Antidote: Happiness for...
- What If You Never Sort Your Life Out
In one of his talks or interviews – I've never been able to...
- The Three-Or-Four-Hours Rule
The three-or-four-hours rule for getting creative work done....
- How to Make Writing Less Hard
Inspired in part by the return of an age-old discussion...
- Three Pages a Day
Of all the self-help tools I've tested through the years,...
- Books
Join Oliver as he shares practical tools that will help you make the most of each day. At the end of the course, you’ll see time completely differently. Become a better procrastinator. Adopt practical productivity techniques. Embrace imperfection.
For the uninitiated, the basic technique goes like this: figure out the time you have available for work (or housework, or life admin – it's useful there too). Then divide it into 25-minute chunks of focus, or Pomodoros.
11 de ago. de 2021 · Oliver Burkeman, whose new book is “Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals.” Nina Subin. In place of checklists of things to do before you’re fully awake or paths for getting to...
Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals is a 2021 non-fiction book written by British author Oliver Burkeman. The title draws from the premise that "the average human lifespan is absurdly, terrifyingly, insultingly short...
11 de ago. de 2021 · I recently spoke with Burkeman about how a philosophy of time management that accepts these daunting realities can help us do the things we care about most.