Stop reacting to the 'Tyranny of the Urgent' and start building for the long term. Learn how to protect deep-work blocks and prioritize the strategic tasks that drive real disciple-making impact.

Time management is about stewardship of the people and opportunities God has given us. We can either squander it on the 'Urgent' or invest it in the 'Important' work that actually moves the needle.
Help me think through different quadrant 2 (important but not urgent) things that campus ministries need to focus on. And give me practical tips for investing time in my schedule into quadrant 2 things.


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**Lena:** Hey Miles, I was just thinking about how campus ministry can feel like you're constantly putting out fires. You know, between the last-minute student crises and the endless Slack pings, it’s like we’re always reacting.
**Miles:** It’s so true. I mean, research shows that up to 60 percent of working hours are actually lost to low-value tasks and interruptions. We get trapped in what Stephen Covey calls the "Tyranny of the Urgent," where we’re so busy with the loud stuff that we neglect the quiet, important work.
**Lena:** Exactly! Like, we know discipling student leaders is vital, but it’s so easy to push that off for an "urgent" email.
**Miles:** Right, and that’s why we’re diving into Quadrant 2 today—those important but not urgent tasks like long-term vision casting and personal health that actually move the needle.
**Lena:** I love that. Let’s explore how to actually protect those deep-work blocks in a hectic campus schedule.