WHO'S PLAN ARE YOU IN?
Most people think they’re living their own life.
But if you actually look at where your time goes, it tells a different story.
By the time you account for work, commuting, obligations, and the exhaustion that follows, there’s very little left that truly belongs to you. Maybe an hour a day, if that. Across a year, it adds up to something like ten days.
This book starts there.
Not as a complaint, but as a way of seeing things clearly. Because once you notice it, a lot of things begin to make sense —
why it’s so hard to make progress on anything meaningful,
why you feel stuck even when you’re trying,
and why “just use your evenings and weekends” rarely works the way people say it should.
It isn’t about quitting your job or taking big risks.
It’s about understanding the structure you’re already inside, and the difference between building something for yourself versus spending your time building something for someone else.
Most people are on one path without ever realising
there’s another one available.
The ideas in this book weren’t written from a distance.
They were put together in small gaps of time, in between everything else life demands. It doesn’t offer a perfect plan or a clean escape.
What it does offer is:
- a different way to think about your time
- and a practical way to start using what little of it you have more deliberately
Nothing in here is complicated.
But it might change how you look at your days —
and what you decide to do with them.
𝐼𝑓 𝑎𝑛𝑦 𝑜𝑓 𝑡ℎ𝑖𝑠 𝑓𝑒𝑒𝑙𝑠 𝑓𝑎𝑚𝑖𝑙𝑖𝑎𝑟, 𝑖𝑡’𝑠 𝑝𝑟𝑜𝑏𝑎𝑏𝑙𝑦 𝑤𝑜𝑟𝑡ℎ 𝑎 𝑟𝑒𝑎𝑑.