We spend much of our lives worrying about money.
How to earn more of it. How to save it. How to stretch it a little further.
We measure success in Dollars, Rands, and cents.And we often judge our progress by what sits in our bank accounts.
But there is a deeper truth.
One that shapes every decision we make:
We may run out of money… but we will run out of time.
We can always earn more money.
Lost fortunes have been rebuilt. Careers restarted. Businesses reborn.
A person can go from nothing to something more than once in a lifetime.
Money, for all its importance, is renewable.
Time is not.
Once a day is gone, it is gone forever.
Once a year passes, we can't recycle it.
There is no savings account for time, no investment that brings it back with interest.
Every moment spent is a moment spent for good.
And yet, we often treat time as if it were limitless, while treating money as if it were scarce.
We delay the things that matter most. We postpone conversations. We put off experiences.
We say, “I’ll do it later". As if later is a guarantee.
We sacrifice hours, days, and years chasing more money.
Sometimes, at the cost of living the very life that money was meant to support.
This is not to say that money doesn’t matter. It does.
It provides security, opportunity, and freedom.
But money is a tool, not the goal. Time is the true currency of life.
The real question is not, “How much money do I have?” but “How am I spending my time?”
Are we investing our time in things that matter? In people who matter?
In work that's meaningful? In moments that bring joy, growth, and connection?
Or are we trading our time too cheaply?
Giving it away to stress, distraction, or pursuits that leave us feeling empty?
There is a quiet wisdom in recognising the difference.
When we understand that time is finite, our priorities begin to shift.
We become more deliberate. More present. More aware of what truly matters.
We begin to choose differently. Not just based on what pays the most, but on what gives the most back to our lives.
You start to see that a simple moment shared with someone you care about may be worth more than any financial gain.
That taking a chance, trying something new, or enjoying where you are right now has value.
Because in the end, it is not the amount of money we accumulated that defines our lives.
It is how we spent our time.
So yes, manage your money wisely.
Earn it, save it, use it well. But guard your time even more carefully.
Spend it with intention. Spend it on what matters.
Because while we may run out of money and find a way to recover…
We will run out of time.
And there are no second chances to spend it again.
With very best wishes,
Chris Wilkinson - Messenger of Hope.
