Energy is More Precious Than Time
There. I said it. And I mean it.
The personal energy you have at your disposal is way more important than the amount of time you have. Because let’s face it—you could have all the time in the world, but if you don’t have the energy to use that time then it’s wasted. On the other hand, if you have limited time but limitless energy, you can still get a lot done. It’s a weird dynamic.
I absolutely believe that time is precious. But I think it’s less precious than the energy we bring to that time. What would be the point of living forever, for example, if you’re bed ridden the entire time?
No… energy is the key.
Willpower can get you through some rough patches with your personal energy. I think of that as “reserve power.” It kind of sucks, honestly… having to force yourself through is painful. But it’s there. And it highlights my point: You can’t willpower time, but willpower can boost how you use time. Your personal energy makes your time more valuable.
I’m thinking about all of this on a morning when my energy is a little low. I got “con crud,” in a small dose, after being in Vegas all of last week. Nothing major… I just have some congestion and my energy is a little low. But already, as I do my work and sip my coffee and let some cool, fresh air into my office, I’m feeling better. My energy is at least high enough to do the work I love. And that’s good energy management. That’s a good use of my time.
Take care of yourselves. Manage your energy well. Treat it as a valuable commodity, because it is. The most precious commodity you have.
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ISOLATED. MURDERED. GHOSTS IN THE MACHINE.
Book Five of the Quake Runner: Alex Kayne Thrillers
ALEX Kayne has spent years running from the law.
Now she’s running toward a killer.
When a young freelancer’s body is discovered hundreds of miles from home, the case looks like another tragedy destined to go cold. But Alex sees the pattern no one else can. Remote workers. Isolated lives. Digital identities that keep moving, keep speaking, keep earning—long after the real person is dead.
Someone is murdering the invisible and leaving echoes behind.
With QuIEK, her quantum-based AI, Kayne can slip through any system, unlock any secret, and vanish from nearly any trap. But this time, the enemy runs in the same virtual terrain. The killer lives in the shadows between real life and online existence, turning lonely people into puppets, trophies, and ghosts in the machine.
To stop them, Kayne must return to the life she thought she’d left behind: disguises, dead drops, stolen cars, false identities, and the constant pulse-pounding pressure of being hunted from every direction.
And somewhere in Seattle, the next victim is already being erased.
ECHO is a high-velocity techno-thriller about identity, obsession, justice, and the terrifying question of what remains of us when the world only knows our digital shadow. Fast, moody, razor-edged, and relentless, this is Alex Kayne at her most dangerous—and her most vulnerable.
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