Time is Everything: Notes on Honest Living
What if the life you're supposed to want isn't the life you actually want?
After years of performing the role of the perfect partner, the accommodating friend, the responsible adult, Arthur A. Tiger watched his carefully constructed life collapse—and discovered something unexpected in the ruins: freedom.
Time is Everything is a philosophical memoir for men who are tired of social performance and ready for honest living. It's a book about what happens when you stop trying to be the right kind of man and start trying to be an authentic one.
THE CENTRAL INSIGHT:
Time is the only resource you can't replace, recover, or renew. Every minute spent living someone else's version of your life is gone forever. This single realization changes everything—how you approach relationships, work, possessions, and the fundamental question of what makes life worth living.
WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER:
→ Why saying 'no' is the most important skill for protecting what matters
→ The difference between solitude and loneliness—and why one is essential for genuine connection
→ How working with your hands teaches lessons abstract knowledge can't provide
→ Why the wrong relationship is worse than no relationship—and how to recognize the difference
→ The art of living deliberately in a world designed for distraction
→ How to declutter not just possessions but commitments, relationships, and ways of spending time
→ Why getting older is about becoming more yourself, not less
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Time is Everything: Notes on Honest Living
Time is Everything: Notes on Honest Living
What if the life you're supposed to want isn't the life you actually want?
After years of performing the role of the perfect partner, the accommodating friend, the responsible adult, Arthur A. Tiger watched his carefully constructed life collapse—and discovered something unexpected in the ruins: freedom.
Time is Everything is a philosophical memoir for men who are tired of social performance and ready for honest living. It's a book about what happens when you stop trying to be the right kind of man and start trying to be an authentic one.
THE CENTRAL INSIGHT:
Time is the only resource you can't replace, recover, or renew. Every minute spent living someone else's version of your life is gone forever. This single realization changes everything—how you approach relationships, work, possessions, and the fundamental question of what makes life worth living.
WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER:
→ Why saying 'no' is the most important skill for protecting what matters
→ The difference between solitude and loneliness—and why one is essential for genuine connection
→ How working with your hands teaches lessons abstract knowledge can't provide
→ Why the wrong relationship is worse than no relationship—and how to recognize the difference
→ The art of living deliberately in a world designed for distraction
→ How to declutter not just possessions but commitments, relationships, and ways of spending time
→ Why getting older is about becoming more yourself, not less
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$8.45Product Information
Product Information
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Description
What if the life you're supposed to want isn't the life you actually want?
After years of performing the role of the perfect partner, the accommodating friend, the responsible adult, Arthur A. Tiger watched his carefully constructed life collapse—and discovered something unexpected in the ruins: freedom.
Time is Everything is a philosophical memoir for men who are tired of social performance and ready for honest living. It's a book about what happens when you stop trying to be the right kind of man and start trying to be an authentic one.
THE CENTRAL INSIGHT:
Time is the only resource you can't replace, recover, or renew. Every minute spent living someone else's version of your life is gone forever. This single realization changes everything—how you approach relationships, work, possessions, and the fundamental question of what makes life worth living.
WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER:
→ Why saying 'no' is the most important skill for protecting what matters
→ The difference between solitude and loneliness—and why one is essential for genuine connection
→ How working with your hands teaches lessons abstract knowledge can't provide
→ Why the wrong relationship is worse than no relationship—and how to recognize the difference
→ The art of living deliberately in a world designed for distraction
→ How to declutter not just possessions but commitments, relationships, and ways of spending time
→ Why getting older is about becoming more yourself, not less