У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно The I Don't Have Time Lie: What You're Really Saying или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
The statement I don't have time is a social lie. It functions as a shield to mask a shift in priorities and avoid the guilt associated with that choice. Logic: Observation: Claiming to be too busy for a task (e.g. creative work) while spending hours on unproductive activities (e.g. scrolling). The time exists; the intention does not. Function: Manufactured busyness is social currency. It projects importance and status. Deception: The lie frames a deficit of intent as a deficit of hours. Application: In relationships, life got busy is an excuse for prioritizing other things over the friendship. Resolution: Acknowledging a shift in priorities is liberating. It replaces victimhood with agency. Re-framing: You are not quitting. You are pausing or allowing your interests to evolve. Argues that the common claim I don't have time is a social lie used to mask shifting priorities and avoid the guilt of making different choices. The speaker uses the example of neglecting creative pursuits (music and dancing) to illustrate that the hours often exist, but the intention to use them for those activities has diminished. This manufactured busyness serves as a shield that protects individuals from admitting they prefer to spend time on less productive activities (like scrolling through videos) and simultaneously boosts their social status by making them appear important and in demand. The video extends this logic to relationships, asserting that friendships drift apart due to a change in priorities, not merely a lack of time. The speaker concludes that acknowledging the shift in priorities is liberating, transforming the narrative from quitting to pausing and allowing for the natural evolution of interests and commitments. Main Claim: The statement I don't have time is a socially acceptable lie that functions as a shield, protecting individuals from the guilt of admitting that their priorities have shifted and that they are choosing to spend their available time on other activities. Logic: 1. Observation of Discrepancy: The speaker claims to be too busy for creative work but later finds hours spent on unproductive activities, demonstrating that the time deficit is false. 2. Identification of Function: The busyness claim is identified as a social currency that purchases validation and status, making the individual appear important and in demand. 3. Mechanism of Deception: The lie serves to hide a deficit of intent (lack of desire to pursue the activity) by framing it as a deficit of hours (lack of available time). 4. Application to Relationships: The logic is applied to interpersonal relationships, where life got busy is the default excuse for drifting apart, masking the harder truth that one person prioritized other things over the relationship. 5. Resolution through Honesty: Accepting that priorities shift (agency) is presented as a more hopeful and less guilt-inducing perspective than believing one is a helpless victim of time constraints. 6. Re-framing of Identity: Acknowledging the shift allows for the evolution of identity, changing the narrative from a permanent failure (quitting) to a temporary state (pausing or flowback).