
Learning to Inhabit Time Instead of Measuring It
We’ve been taught to live on timelines.
Deadlines.
Milestones.
Ages we should be by now.
Seasons we’re expected to move through quickly.
We measure life the way we measure productivity — in units, outcomes, and forward motion — and then wonder why everything feels rushed, compressed, and strangely hollow.
Somewhere along the way, time stopped being something we inhabited and became something we tried to manage.
And I don’t believe it was ever meant to be that way.
The Space Most People Rush Through
Most of us are taught to live either looking backward or pushing forward.
We revisit the past searching for clarity.
We scan the future hunting for reassurance.
And the present becomes a narrow hallway we move through quickly, afraid to linger.
But there is a space we’re rarely taught how to live in.
The in-between.
It’s the space after something ends but before anything begins.
The pause after a truth lands but before it reshapes us.
The season where clarity hasn’t arrived yet — and isn’t supposed to.
So we rush it.
We fill it with plans.
We label it as waiting, delay, or wasted time.
We force movement through a pause that was meant to be inhabited.
What If the In-Between Isn’t Empty?
What if the in-between isn’t empty at all?
What if the in-between is where perspective widens — not because we’re trying harder, but because we stop forcing movement through pauses meant to be lived?
What if this space isn’t a problem to solve, but a posture to practice?
Here, patterns become visible without being relived.
Here, the past can be acknowledged without being reentered.
Here, the future loosens its grip long enough for us to breathe.
The in-between doesn’t ask us to decide.
It asks us to pay attention.
Presence Is Not a Timestamp
We often confuse presence with “now,” as if the present moment were a dot on a clock.
But presence isn’t about when.
It’s about how.
You can be fully present while reflecting on the past — if you’re listening instead of reliving.
You can be present while looking ahead — if you’re imagining without escaping.
Presence is the posture that allows us to meet each moment honestly, wherever it arrives from.
And the in-between teaches this better than any system designed to optimize time ever could.
Because here, there’s nothing to measure.
Only something to notice.
The Problem With How We Measure Time
We measure time in ways that limit us.
We box it.
We segment it.
We rank it by efficiency and output.
And in doing so, we shrink our lives.
This way of measuring time leaves no room for becoming.
It treats pauses as failures and stillness as waste.
It demands progress even when what’s really needed is integration.
But growth doesn’t happen on a stopwatch.
And wisdom doesn’t arrive on schedule.
I don’t believe time was meant to confine us this way.
I believe it was meant to be inhabited, not managed.
Learning to Stay
Living comfortably in the in-between doesn’t mean you’re stuck.
It means you’re listening.
It means you’re letting life speak before you answer.
It means you’re no longer measuring your worth by motion alone.
You’re inhabiting the moment instead of outrunning it.
This is where healing happens quietly.
Where understanding settles without announcement.
Where we stop performing certainty and start practicing trust.
The in-between isn’t wasted time.
It’s formative time.
An Invitation
If you find yourself here — not who you were, not yet who you’re becoming — you’re not behind.
You’re exactly where depth is built.
Step out of the box that insists you must be somewhere else by now.
Release the urge to force forward motion through sacred pauses.
Let presence meet you wherever you are — in memory, in hope, in today.
Stay.
There is something in the in-between that only reveals itself to those willing to linger.
And when you learn how to live here, time loosens its grip — and meaning finds you instead.
A Gentle Question to Consider
What if the pauses you’ve been rushing through are actually invitations?
Invitations to discover a deeper layer of yourself.
To listen more closely to what life is whispering when you’re not measuring it.
To find a kind of freedom that only comes when we stop keeping time and start keeping presence.
Learning to linger,
Tina N. Campbell
Scribed in Light
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