How many times have I heard the phrase, "time is money," and never gave it a second thought? "The Time Seller," by Fernando Trias de Bes, examines the idea literally, with humorous and thought-provoking results.
"Why should life be any different? Why should one wait till one's deathbed to do the balance sheet of one's life?" Assets become liabilities, and liabilities become assets, when time becomes a commodity to sell. Distributed in 5-minute increments in urine sample bottles, time could be something you literally could piss away. But for awhile, simply having 5 minutes of your own becomes something delightful, not squandered.
At the end of the book Fernando Trias de Bes writes: "Today we do not live under political totalitarianism but rather under another, less tangible one. The system that enslaves us is extremely subtle: we are slaves to our freedom, to our free system. ...Let us exercise our freedom, but let us give it meaning. Let us seek out our own benefit, bearing in mind that there are ways we can do so while taking into account the needs of others. The system should take from the individual only the time that is fair and absolutely necessary, and it should, in turn, provide each individual with the means to express love, humanity, spirituality, cooperation, solidarity, and help for others."
The book's Afterward reminds us of what Gandalf says to Frodo in "The Lord of the Rings:" "All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us."