He who puts off nothing till tomorrow has done a great deal.
Seneca detested procrastination — not because of productivity, but because of mortality. In his essay *On the Shortness of Life*, he observed how many people waste their best years planning instead of doing. He knew tomorrow was never promised. A day postponed was a day lost. Instead of letting tasks and duties pile up, Seneca advised addressing them with urgency and clarity. It wasn't about rushing — it was about respecting time.
Every task you complete today is a life reclaimed from the fog of delay.
"You may delay, but time will not."