Time-Money Paradigm (in 10 sentences; ok 12)
1. Money is an asset because it is a master template to buy all things you must have.
2. Time is an asset because it is a master template to do all things you want to do.
3. If I reduce my things to buy, I can stretch the money - and thus free the time (otherwise needed to earn more money to sustain myself).
4. How to use money is easy. How to use time is a more difficult question - because we do not know what to do with this life (and money saved us - we picked any one profession since we must have money - and thus never had to ask "what do I want to do actually?").
5. How to use time is also a difficult question because usually the additional time you freed up is funded by the opportunity loss of money you could have earned instead.
6. So, you would want the "time earned" by "losing money" (or spending money) to "matter". Well, the language of "it should matter" is the language of "return of investment:.
7. What can be the RoI of time (not as a function of money, but as tasks fulfilled")?
8. This question itself will trigger the equation of money and how you were a fool to barter it for extra time. So, “smart” people do not downshift. (”what would I do with the extra time” and “How do I pay the for bills coming out of my ears each month”?)
9. Meanwhile, trees live at tree pace in "tree time" (that cannot be compartmentalized or rushed as "human time" can be) - Spring comes and grass grows by itself.
10. Meanwhile, squirrels and barking deers come to drink water at Garud taal, and pups laze around and play and starve and eat as they get or please. Beavers are on an endless dam-building spree. Damn!
11. In an parallel, non-axiomatic world, thus, meanwhile, animals and plants and Northern Lights and Pine trees coexist with us "unresonating" continuously with our worries of time and money.
12. Tolkien and CS Lewis and Louis Lamour and Terry Pretchett and Ray Bradbury invented parallel universes fell flat, before what plants and trees and animals lived with.
2. Time is an asset because it is a master template to do all things you want to do.
3. If I reduce my things to buy, I can stretch the money - and thus free the time (otherwise needed to earn more money to sustain myself).
4. How to use money is easy. How to use time is a more difficult question - because we do not know what to do with this life (and money saved us - we picked any one profession since we must have money - and thus never had to ask "what do I want to do actually?").
5. How to use time is also a difficult question because usually the additional time you freed up is funded by the opportunity loss of money you could have earned instead.
6. So, you would want the "time earned" by "losing money" (or spending money) to "matter". Well, the language of "it should matter" is the language of "return of investment:.
7. What can be the RoI of time (not as a function of money, but as tasks fulfilled")?
8. This question itself will trigger the equation of money and how you were a fool to barter it for extra time. So, “smart” people do not downshift. (”what would I do with the extra time” and “How do I pay the for bills coming out of my ears each month”?)
9. Meanwhile, trees live at tree pace in "tree time" (that cannot be compartmentalized or rushed as "human time" can be) - Spring comes and grass grows by itself.
10. Meanwhile, squirrels and barking deers come to drink water at Garud taal, and pups laze around and play and starve and eat as they get or please. Beavers are on an endless dam-building spree. Damn!
11. In an parallel, non-axiomatic world, thus, meanwhile, animals and plants and Northern Lights and Pine trees coexist with us "unresonating" continuously with our worries of time and money.
12. Tolkien and CS Lewis and Louis Lamour and Terry Pretchett and Ray Bradbury invented parallel universes fell flat, before what plants and trees and animals lived with.
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