Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Maybe it helps being rich, but just as a counter example, my grandfather was never rich. He was a clock-in/clock-out guy and still managed to spend a lot of time with me while I was growing up. He had a lot more patience than most of the "white collar" adults in my life ever did, and taught me lots of useful skills like how to fix a lot of electrical or mechanical things.


Sure it’s possible to do it when you’re not rich. It’s just a lot easier if you are. Like many things in life. :)


"It's better to be young, rich and healthy than old, sick and poor" is probably not the most novel insight worth writing down for the benefit of others.


I believe the insight that I was sharing is that it matters in this case, as many people would not realize that it is relevant here.


You think 'a lot of things that take time are easier when you have the means to do whatever you want with your time' is something that eludes most people? About anything much, really, be it child rearing or laundry? I think that is very, very unlikely.


My experience as a parent and in talking to other parents says yes, it eludes most anyone I ever talk to about it.

Also the 33 point on the post tell me at least 33 more people found it interesting than did not.


It could well be that you're right and noticing that not having to go to work frees up a lot of time is indeed a counterintuitive and valuable lifehack. It could also be that I'm right and it's an observation made of pure triteonium.

I'm sure we can both agree, though, that the gold standard for statistical significance is 30 Helens. 33 HN users is nowhere close to 30 Helens.


White collar doesn't mean rich. It means never really clocking out because your time is valuable enough it is worth monetizing every minute of it.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: