There’s an hourglass on my desk. I flip it every morning before I start working.
It doesn’t beep or vibrate. It doesn’t sync to a calendar. But it keeps perfect time.
Every grain that falls is a second I don’t get back.
That’s the whole idea behind a framework I call the Creator’s Hourglass.
It’s not a new productivity method. It’s an old way to look at time: as something finite, physical, and falling. The hourglass doesn’t care what you planned. It doesn’t care what you hoped. It tells the truth.
If you had a year left to live, would you still answer every email? Sit through every meeting? Chase every task like it mattered?
Most time management systems assume the goal is efficiency. Get more done. Maximize the hour. But if you’re efficient at wasting time, all you’ve done is move faster toward the wrong things.
The hourglass doesn’t let you forget. It makes time feel heavy. And when time is heavy, it’s easier to spot the things worth carrying.
I divide my days into two phases:
Wide Mouth: Divergence. Let things in. Wander. Read. Sketch. Drift. This is the open intake phase, where ideas collide and mutate. Nothing is expected to be useful yet. It just needs to breathe.
Narrow Neck: Convergence. Choose. Cut. Make. Publish. This is where you collapse the options into one outcome. No more researching. No more thinking about thinking. It’s time to act.
Divergence without convergence is procrastination. Convergence without divergence is mimicry. The hourglass keeps them in balance.
The Creator’s Hourglass isn’t concerned with working more or less. It’s working under pressure, because pressure clarifies. It strips the pretense. It shows you what actually matters.
Every grain of sand is a decision.
Every grain you waste is gone forever.
Flip the glass. Feel the weight. Then build something that can outlast it.