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No me da la vida

I don't have time

ES
Example

Entre el curro, la casa y los niños, no me da la vida; tengo 200 cosas pendientes y cero ganas.

When to use it

When you've had a week full of work, errands, the gym and a hundred unanswered messages, and someone suggests meeting up today, you say this to explain without sounding rude.

What it means

It's a very colloquial way of saying you're overwhelmed and the day (or your energy) isn't enough for everything: as if 'life' were a budget that keeps running short. It sounds more dramatic and funny than 'no tengo tiempo', and is used a lot in Spain (and understood in other countries too) to talk about both a packed schedule and mental exhaustion. It became especially popular on social media and in quick conversations, because it perfectly captures that feeling of always being on the go.

Don't confuse it with

"No me da la vida" does not mean i've got all my life ahead, i can't be bothered, i can't wait. It specifically means "I don't have time".

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