There’s a question I’ve started asking myself at every decision point in my day, and it’s deceptively simple: Am I acting from intention or inertia? It sounds like a mindset prompt. It isn’t. It’s the diagnostic core of an intentional living system — one that, once you start using it, reveals something uncomfortable: a significant amount of what most of us call “being productive” is actually inertia wearing productivity’s clothes.
It sounds like a mindset prompt. It isn’t. It’s a diagnostic tool — one that, once you start using it, reveals something uncomfortable: a significant amount of what most of us call “being productive” is actually inertia wearing productivity’s clothes.
Checking email first thing in the morning. Defaulting to your task list after a meeting. Filling a gap in your schedule with the first thing that comes to mind. None of these are inherently wrong. But when they happen automatically — when there’s no conscious choice behind them — they’re not productivity. They’re momentum masquerading as intention.
This distinction matters more than most frameworks acknowledge, because the problem with conventional productivity advice isn’t that it gives you bad tools. It’s that it gives you tools for doing more without ever asking whether more is the right direction. It optimizes motion without checking for meaning.
The Three Realms
In my upcoming book Productiveness, I describe three realms people tend to operate from. The Ruthless Realm is all output, no alignment — maximum motion, minimum reflection. The Reckless Realm is all ideas, no follow-through — scattered starts, unfinished work, and the exhausting feeling of being busy without making real progress. Most people don’t live permanently in either one. They oscillate between them.
That oscillation is the trap. And it’s exhausting in a way that’s hard to name, because from the outside — and even from the inside — it can look like productivity.
What I call the Reasoned Realm is the alternative. It’s not a compromise between ruthless and reckless. It’s a third thing entirely: a state where your choices are anchored in your values rather than driven by circumstance. This realm is harder to reach and harder to maintain, partly because it requires you to slow down long enough to ask whether what you’re doing is actually what you mean to be doing.
Why “Intentional” Has Stopped Meaning Anything
The word intentional has been flattened by overuse. It’s on coffee mugs. It’s in productivity books that never define it. And it’s become a synonym for “thoughtful” or “mindful” or, worse, for a particular aesthetic of slow living. But in its operational form — the form that actually affects how you spend your hours — intentionality is a practice, not a posture.
Specifically, it’s the practice of asking, before you spend your time and energy: does this align with what I actually value? Not “is this productive?” Not “is this on my list?” But does this reflect a deliberate choice, or am I here because this is where the current carried me?
That’s the question that separates intentional time from wasted time. And it’s one most productivity systems never ask.
Daily Themes: The Engine of an Intentional Living System
TimeCrafting — the approach I’ve developed over many years — is built around this question. One of its core tools, daily themes, is often the first thing people push back on when they hear about it. It sounds rigid. It sounds like a schedule dressed up in softer language.
But it isn’t. A daily theme is a gravitational pull, not a mandate. It doesn’t dictate every task in your day. It answers a different question: what kind of day is this meant to be? And that reframe matters, because “what am I going to do today?” is an anxiety-producing question. “What day is it?” is not. One has an infinite number of answers. The other has exactly one.
When I theme my days — attunement, connection, exploration, stewardship — I’m not blocking off rigid time slots. I’m giving myself a lens. A theme day that honors 70% of its focus still builds cadence. And cadence, compounded over weeks and months, is what intentional living actually looks like from the inside.
The other thing worth noting: the most durable daily themes are universal. They apply to your work and your life, without distinction. I don’t mow the lawn on a Tuesday. I don’t schedule podcast interviews on a Saturday. These aren’t rules — they’re patterns I’ve noticed, honored, and over time, internalized. When a theme day works across your whole life and not just your job description, you stop having to switch modes between work and home. The lens travels with you.
The Question Worth Posting Somewhere Visible
“Am I acting from intention or inertia?”
Put it on a Post-it note. Set it as a calendar reminder. Write it at the top of your daily list. The tool doesn’t matter. What matters is the pause it creates — a brief moment where you get to choose rather than react, where you get to act as the author of your time rather than its subject.
If the answer is inertia, that’s not a failure. It might mean you’re burnt out or tired or just running on autopilot. But the awareness itself creates a pivot point. You can redirect. You can ask: what would intention look like right now? What’s the smallest move I can make that’s actually aligned with what I value today?
That’s what being productive looks like — not the output, not the list, not the metrics. The active link between your intention and your attention. And that link is something you have to choose, repeatedly, at every decision point in your day.
