Time - The Organizing Principle From Denver, CO 5-2-98 Q: Battling linear time? B: What does that mean? Q: Well, having many more things to do and get done. B: Sometimes, not always, but more often than not, that is a symptom of doing more that you have to do. It is usually a symptom of not really allowing the thing that excites you the most be the first thing you do. Because the thing that excites you the most, pay attention, IS: A) the organizing principle, and B) the driving engine that determines C) what other things need to be done. When you act on the thing that excites you the most to the best of your ability /FIRST/, your day will automatically organize itself in order of all the things that excites you that you have the ability to do. Whatever it is, in a sense, you don't have time to do when you've done that day didn't need doing. Because when you operate that way all the things that are truly important for you to function holistically and all the circumstances that really need to appear in your life to allow you to *DO* what you really need to get done *WILL* feel and fit perfectly *IN* any given moment, or day, or time span. And will allow you to experience this in a very effortless, creative, poetic, and synchronistic way, rather than feeling you have to scrambled to do things that may only be, in a sense, things that your personality structure has been taught it needs to do as an aspect of who you think you are.