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Last week, I want you to try something. Ask someone you know this question: “If you had a completely free day tomorrow with zero obligations, what would you do?” Watch their face. Really watch it. Because what happened when I asked this question to ten different people fundamentally changed how I think about modern life.
Seven of them couldn’t answer. Not because they lacked imagination or interests, but because the question itself triggered something I can only describe as existential panic. Their eyes went wide, they laughed nervously, and then came the stammering attempts to remember what they even liked doing anymore.
The three who could answer? They all said some version of “sleep.”
We’ve forgotten how to want things for ourselves
One person, a marketing director I was interviewing for a piece on workplace burnout, stared at me for a full thirty seconds before saying, “I honestly don’t know. I’d probably just end up cleaning my house or getting ahead on work emails.” When I pointed out that those were still obligations, she looked genuinely lost.
This wasn’t an isolated incident. Throughout my interviews with over 200 people for various articles, from startup founders to burned-out middle managers, this pattern kept emerging. We’ve become so accustomed to our days being dictated by external demands that the concept of unstructured time feels threatening rather than liberating.
Think about it. When was the last time you had a day that wasn’t choreographed by your calendar app? When did you last wake up without immediately mentally cataloging what needed to be done? We’ve created lives so dense with productivity that the absence of it feels like falling.
The productivity trap became our identity
Here’s what I think happened: somewhere along the way, we started equating our worth with our output. Being busy became synonymous with being important, being needed, being valuable. An empty calendar slot feels like professional failure. A weekend without plans seems like social inadequacy.
I spent most of my twenties using busyness as a shield against vulnerability. If I was always rushing to the next meeting, the next deadline, the next commitment, I never had to sit with the uncomfortable questions about what I actually wanted from life. The irony isn’t lost on me that I now write about this exact trap that I fell into so completely.
We’ve built entire identities around being “the reliable one” or “the one who gets things done.” But what happens when there’s nothing to get done? Who are we when we’re not performing productivity?
The fear of unstructured time is real
A researcher studying organizational behavior once told me something that stuck: “People would rather give themselves electric shocks than sit alone with their thoughts for fifteen minutes.” She was referencing an actual study, and while it sounds extreme, my informal survey suggests it’s not far off.
The panic I witnessed wasn’t just discomfort. It was genuine anxiety about confronting the void where their personal desires should be. One woman actually pulled out her phone while trying to answer, as if she could Google what she wanted to do with free time.
What are we so afraid of? Maybe it’s the realization that we’ve been running on someone else’s schedule for so long that we’ve lost touch with our own internal compass. Maybe it’s the fear that without external validation through accomplishment, we don’t know how to measure a day’s worth.
We’ve outsourced our desires
Have you noticed how we even approach leisure now? We optimization it. We research the best restaurants, the most Instagram-worthy vacations, the most productive ways to relax. We’ve turned rest into another item on our achievement checklist.
I started baking during a particularly stressful period, not because I had some deep passion for sourdough, but because it seemed like what productive people did with their downtime. It took me months to realize I actually enjoyed the precision of it, the forced single-tasking, the inability to check email while my hands were covered in dough. But initially? It was just another way to be productively unproductive.
We’ve let algorithms decide what we watch, influencers determine what we want, and productivity gurus dictate how we should spend every waking moment. No wonder we panic when asked what we actually want to do.
The cost of losing touch with ourselves
This isn’t just about having hobbies or knowing how to relax. It’s about something much deeper. When we can’t answer what we’d do with free time, we’re essentially admitting we don’t know what brings us joy outside of external validation and structured achievement.
The people who could answer my question without panic all had one thing in common: they’d already had some kind of reckoning with this issue. One had burned out completely and spent six months rebuilding their relationship with time. Another had gone through a divorce that forced them to figure out who they were outside of their roles and responsibilities.
Do we all need to hit rock bottom to remember what we actually enjoy? I hope not. But the fact that it takes a crisis for most of us to reconnect with our own desires should tell us something about how far we’ve drifted.
Finding our way back
I take a mid-afternoon walk now that I generously call “creative thinking time” but is really just procrastination that sometimes works. During these walks, I’ve been practicing something radical: not trying to solve anything. Not planning, not optimizing, not achieving. Just walking.
It’s harder than it sounds. My brain immediately wants to turn it into content, into productivity, into something measurable. But I’m learning to let thoughts come and go without pursuing them, to notice things without photographing them, to have experiences without monetizing them.
Start small. Next time you have fifteen unexpected free minutes, don’t immediately reach for your phone. Sit with the discomfort. What bubbles up? What do you notice yourself wanting to do once the panic subsides?
Before I go
That panic I witnessed when I asked about free time? It’s not a personal failing. It’s a symptom of a culture that’s convinced us our value lies only in our utility to others. We’ve been so well-trained to respond to external demands that we’ve forgotten how to hear our own internal voice.
The question isn’t really about what you’d do with a free day. It’s about whether you still know who you are when nobody’s watching, when nothing’s due, when the calendar is empty. If that question makes you panic, you’re not alone. But maybe that panic is trying to tell you something important.
Maybe it’s time to listen.
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