 I'm Jason Farman. I'm author of the book Delayed Response, The Art of Waiting from the Ancient to the Instant World. We can imagine shifting our perspectives of waiting from something that's detrimental to us as robbing us of one of our most valuable resources to thinking about it instead as something that's valuable. Technology gives us the opportunity to fill every second of a day, and the end result of that is a really overworked, busy population of people who don't have downtime, and wait times in contrast are really essential toward productivity, toward actually achieving the good life where instead of being completely overwhelmed and using every second of your day towards some goal of productivity, instead wait times are essential toward any kind of notion of innovation and productivity because you need the pauses in a day to innovate, to think about new things, to give yourself the time and the pause and the reflection to do things differently. So I think we have to imagine ways of resisting some of the impulses that are introduced by our media to use every second of the day, and imagine that that's not actually fulfilling the goals that we hope it does of being really productive people and living our fullest lives. Instead waiting I think offers a lot of opportunity for that.