By Ebenezer Adurodija
The Nigerian music veteran Mike Okri in his 1989 hit, “Time na money” delivered practical, street-smart life lessons. Though time is often equated with money, but this comparison falls short of its true significance. Time is the breath of life itself—the invisible currency that shapes destinies, builds nations, and defines legacies. Money can be replaced; time cannot. Every minute that slips away is a silent reminder that life is moving forward, with or without our permission.
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In a world overflowing with noise, speed, and distraction, many people unknowingly trade their most precious resource for fleeting pleasures. Hours vanish into screens, trivial conversations, and unproductive routines. Before long, the dreams that once felt within reach begin to fade, not because they were impossible, but because time was spent on what mattered least.
Yet time remains the one gift granted equally to all. Every dawn hands us a fresh deposit of twenty‑four hours—no more, no less. The difference between those who rise and those who remain stagnant is not luck, wealth, or brilliance. It is the courage to use time intentionally, to choose purpose over comfort, and to honor each day as an opportunity to grow.
History’s greatest achievers understood this truth. They were not merely talented; they were disciplined stewards of their hours. They treated time as fertile soil, planting seeds of effort, consistency, and sacrifice. Over the years, those seeds blossomed into discoveries, inventions, movements, and masterpieces that continue to inspire generations.
But too many people live as though time is infinite. Young people delay learning, believing tomorrow will always come. Professionals postpone their dreams, waiting for a perfect moment that never arrives. Families drift apart, not out of malice, but because time was spent elsewhere. And when the realization finally comes, it often comes with regret.
The impact of wasted time extends beyond individuals. Nations rise or fall on the collective choices of their people. Bureaucratic delays, inefficiency, and a culture of lateness slow progress and dim hope. Nigeria, a nation rich in talent and potential, loses countless opportunities because time is not honored as the treasure it is. Every delayed project, every postponed decision, every hour lost to inefficiency is a step backward in the journey toward national greatness.
Yet the power to change this narrative lies within each of us. Time management is not about filling every moment with activity; it is about aligning our hours with our highest values. Reading, learning, exercising, nurturing relationships, serving others, and reflecting on purpose—these are the investments that yield returns far beyond material wealth.
Technology, though a remarkable tool, must be mastered rather than allowed to master us. Used wisely, it can accelerate learning and amplify impact. Used carelessly, it becomes a thief of dreams. The challenge is to reclaim our attention and direct it toward what strengthens our minds, our families, our communities, and our nation.
Life itself is measured in time. Each birthday marks another chapter completed. Each sunrise whispers possibility; each sunset reminds us that the day’s opportunities have expired. The question is not whether time will pass, but whether we will rise to meet its call.
True success is not defined by the money we accumulate but by the lives we touch, the character we build, and the purpose we pursue. A parent who invests time in raising principled children, a teacher who shapes young minds, a leader who serves with integrity, a citizen who contributes to the common good—these are the true custodians of time.
Those nearing the end of life rarely lament the money they failed to earn. Their regrets center on time wasted, relationships neglected, and dreams left unexplored. Their reflections are not warnings—they are invitations to live differently while we still can.
Every day presents a choice: to drift or to rise, to waste time or to invest it, to merely exist or to truly live. The dividends of wise time investment include wisdom, resilience, deeper relationships, meaningful achievements, and a legacy that endures long after we are gone.
In a world obsessed with wealth, let us remember a profound truth: money can purchase comfort, but it cannot purchase another moment of life. Time remains the only currency that every person spends equally and can never earn back.
The clock is moving. The world is waiting. Your purpose is calling.
Use your time with intention, for in the end, it is not the length of our days that defines us, but the depth of our impact.