
Own Time, Not Things
Escape the Grind and Buy Back Your Freedom
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Owen L. Hartwell

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Success has been sold to us in the shape of square footage, horsepower, brand names, and digital applause. Yet possessions corrode, luxuries age into obligations, and wages are silently gnawed away by inflation while hours—the only nonrenewable currency—vanish irretrievably. Own Time, Not Things dismantles the cultural mirage that equates wealth with accumulation and offers a sharper, more unsettling proposition: real prosperity is measured not in what you can buy but in how little of your life is mortgaged to someone else’s schedule.
This book unravels the grind ideology that glorifies exhaustion as virtue and busyness as status. Drawing on research from psychology, economics, and global cultural traditions, it exposes how the scripts of overwork and consumption are designed to keep individuals tethered to perpetual labor. From the hidden costs of luxury to the compounding benefits of minimalism, from automation that erases repetitive toil to the design of income streams that function while you sleep, each chapter examines practical and philosophical strategies to reclaim autonomy.
You will encounter analyses of how inflation erodes freedom faster than wages rise, why retirement as conventionally defined is an illusion sabotaged by delay, and how geography, technology, and community can be leveraged to build resilient lives untethered from fragile status markers. The narrative is recursive, ironic, and insistently honest, refusing to sentimentalize freedom while also refusing to surrender it to market logic.
This is not a quick-fix manual or a checklist of hacks. It is an excavation of the absurdity of modern definitions of wealth and a blueprint for replacing them with a structure that compounds time instead of debt. If money measures survival, time measures life. And if you do not own your hours, you own nothing at all.
Perfect for readers weary of hustle culture, disillusioned with consumerism, or simply curious about alternative ways of structuring a meaningful existence, Own Time, Not Things is both a dismantling of illusions and a provocation to experiment with freedom in daily life.