There’s something unique about time spent commuting, whether boarding a plane without Wi-Fi, walking through the city streets toward your destination, or driving a familiar route to or from work. These are life's "loading screens," transitional pockets of time that aren’t quite here nor there, which often beg for us to fill them with something, to the point that we often fill them carelessly. They are moments easily overlooked, wasted, or wished away. What if these intervals were actually hidden gems, waiting patiently to be uncovered? What if, instead of wishing that we could teleport to wherever we are going, we were meant to have these moments in between?
These seemingly idle stretches offer freedom. In a society where schedules dictate every waking hour, these transitional times provide rare opportunities to choose how we fill them, whether listening to a thought-provoking podcast, calling a family member or a friend, or simply allowing our minds to wander freely. Sometimes, these moments offer the clearest window into our own thoughts, desires, or creativity precisely because they don’t come attached to any specific obligation.
What makes these brief, in-between experiences valuable is their openness: the freedom to connect, to reflect, or to simply exist without immediate demands. They can be restorative, productive, deeply meaningful, or even just quietly enjoyable. A short walk from your home to the grocery store can become a cherished moment of solitude, allowing you to clear your mind or solve a problem that's been quietly troubling you. Sitting in traffic can be transformed into an intimate opportunity to catch up with a friend, allowing you both to reminisce about what made you close friends in the first place. Even something as mundane as waiting at the airport gate might turn into a chance to journal, set intentions, or finally dive into the book you've been meaning to read. In essence, these buffer times grant us a subtle but powerful choice: we can either overlook their potential, or we can actively shape them into moments of clarity, connection, and personal growth.
All of this is not to say that you must fill these unavoidable voids with content that is not your own, or that you must read every book and listen to every podcast that your friends recommend. Although you very well can zoom through audiobooks on a lengthy enough commute, this time is just as useful turning inwards and thinking about your own thoughts, actions, and values. Thinking about what you want to do today or tomorrow to better yourself and those you love. Thinking about your surroundings and finding things that you are grateful for, even if it is just the solitary moment that has allowed you to think this thought.
The next time you find yourself suspended in life's loading screen, whether sitting on a quiet train, strolling to your next meeting, or stuck in traffic, remember that how you choose to fill that time can define your day more profoundly than you realize.