Falling Off the Time Money Continuum
Falling Off the Time Money Continuum
Money is time. Time is money. Phrases oft said in the financial independence community and in my opinion(as of late) pure horse pucky. We have somehow mangled the idea that we trade these two commodities indiscriminately. Yet, I think this dichotomy is not only too simple, but also harmful to our ultimate goals of both happiness as well as financial freedom. The answer, of course, is simple. We need to learn how to distance ourselves from the time money continuum.
We need to let go, we need to fall off.
Definitions
Time marches on. Always. You can’t trade it for anything. You can’t produce it nor consume it. It exists on a plain outside of our manipulation. Our only decisions, in relation to this plucky phenomenon, is how we choose to entertain ourselves while it passes.
How will you entertain yourself?
Money is a measure of value. It is an abstraction which allows goods and services to be exchanged among individuals. Since time is neither a good nor a service, it cannot be bought or exchanged with money. Never.
There is no such thing as the time money continuum. They are neither related nor continuous.
Work and Employment
Money and work, however, are related. We often trade work for money. This is accomplished in several different ways. We can provide a good or service to someone else and get paid in exchange (W2 income/employment). We can provide a good or service to ourselves instead of paying someone else (Frugality/DIY/Work). Lastly, we can decide that we can live well without the need of certain good and services (minimalism).
In none of these instances does the time money continuum hold up. Time marches on no matter how we entertain ourselves.
How Do You Spend Your Time?
Certainly, a misuse of the word spend. The better question, how do you entertain yourself as time passes? This is especially important in light of the fact that some type of work must be accomplished to buy necessary goods and services.
The answer is easy for me. I choose to spend at least some of my time being a doctor. Unlike many, I don’t find employment a dirty word nor feel retiring early is my ultimate goal. The why is relatively straightforward.
I find it more entertaining to be a doctor, side hustle, or manage real estate than mowing the lawn. More enjoyable than doing the laundry or going to the grocery store.
So I pay someone else to do these things.
This is not trading money for time. I am trading activity for activity.
I find the idea of a no spend month or not eating out insufferable.
Eating out is one of the major ways I entertain myself. Why would I stop doing it?
Final Thoughts
I think it is time we learned how to fall off the time money continuum. There is nothing innately right with frugality and nothing innately wrong with working. Work, in all its forms. is just a way to produce money. Money is necessary to purchase good and services.
Whether practicing medicine or mowing the lawn, work is being done.
I prefer to entertain myself (spend my time so to speak) by doing jobs I enjoy that have a large return on investment. Being a doctor accomplishes this in spades.
I eschew work that is bothersome, tiresome, and produces little return on investment (like doing the laundry).
I don’t know about you, but I would call that frugality in almost every sense of the word.
It’s an interesting take but not sure I agree. To me time is the most expensive item in existence. You can statistically buy a bit more by being healthier and wealthier as shown by life expectancy tables, but in general you can’t really buy large amounts of time. So the choice of time usage is a constant trade off. Even if making money while a doctor is something you enjoy(I enjoy working too) there are other time versus money tradeoffs you make every day. The guy who might cut your lawn or repair your house. The aforementioned out to eat. If you wanted to go to extremes a butler. Ie money can be traded for convienence which does provide time… but whether that’s good or bad is no more a foregone conclusion then whether we like our jobs.
I think we trade activity for activity, or money for service or product. But I think time lies completely out of our control.
Everyone puts a different value on time. Some mundane things may not be enjoyable but not worth it to hire it out. Somethings only you can do. Life is a continual balancing act.
For sure. Balancing what goods and services are worth your money. I still think time is uncontrollable.
“How do you entertain yourself as time passes” is a good way of looking at it. I enjoy working. Being an ER doc is fun and we have the best stories. My side hustles interest me. Yes, I work for money. The trick is to find work that interests you on the other 13 days between paydays.
I imagine ER work is very amenable to this type of thinking because you can work your schedule around your life.
Hey DocG,
I hear your frustrations. This is the best part of all this. As Polonius stated “ This above all: to thine own self be true”.
There is no right way, just what is right for you. Everyone agreeing with something does NOT make anything right. If you can practice listening to that part of yourself which always knows the correct answer for you, all that other stuff ends up being truly noise. And you won’t care and you won’t get frustrated since you just know it doesn’t even apply to you.
So many ways to the “promise land” to FI.
True. We all have our own individual paths. For me, that still involves work.
I think doing things that you find bothersome builds character and keeps your “sacrifice muscles” active. I hear what you’re saying, but I can’t go through life only doing things that make me happy 100% of the time. Unless my happiness is challenged with spates of unhappiness, I don’t get as much enjoyment out of it.
“sacrifice muscles”. I like that.