To Hell with the Hustle Quotes
To Hell with the Hustle
by
Jefferson Bethke7,146 ratings, 3.96 average rating, 911 reviews
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To Hell with the Hustle Quotes
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“Don't buy the lie that a full schedule means productivity or holiness or achievement.”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“Only when we truly know rest and celebration can we know how to work and enjoy it. We work from rest, not to get rest.”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“What if we can't be anything we want to be? What if the goal isn't to hustle but to be faithful? What if the magic of life is found in the mundane, and it comes when we're faithful?”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“The goal of following Jesus isn’t to do a bunch of things. It’s to become a type of person.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“What if God doesn't want me to be big things for Him? Like, at all? What if He just wants me to talk to Him and know Him and live an ordinary live where I love Him and my neighbours well?”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“Solitude is not a private therapeutic place. Rather, it is the place of conversion, the place where the old self dies and the new self is born.”8”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“The bottom line is, we can’t research or think ourselves to a better version of ourselves”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“While we might not all be able to take a year off work, the question that haunts me is, do I trust God enough to do it? Do I think he’d actually take care of me if I did it? Isn’t that what most of our activity and busyness is about anyway? Trying to hedge our bets, saying we are Christians with our lips, but living as spiritual orphans who need to claw and grasp for every last crumb of provision. Do we actually believe God will provide? That he can be trusted?”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“To follow Jesus we need to not just follow his teaching, but also follow his way. His process. His cadence. His demeanor. His spirit. His very essence.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“I’ll even say it a little more plainly for those in the back: we as humans are the summation of our repeated practices and rituals. Humans aren’t made. We are formed.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“The big difference between chaos and shalom is rhythm. Chaos is unpredictable and unrhythmic. It has no set cadence. But shalom is more like a dance that depends on the rhythm in music.”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“Work jumped from being a means of “material production” to being much more about “identity production.”3 In other words, work used to be about making things. Then all of a sudden, work was about making us.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“Hurry is violence on the soul.”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“Silence and solitude are like a graveyard for all the worst in you and your false self.”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“What if we can’t be anything we want to be? What if the goal isn’t to hustle but to be faithful? What if the magic of life is found in the mundane, and it comes when we’re faithful?”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“What if we are attempting to exchange wisdom for shortcuts? One requires years of life experiences, while the other simply requires a Google search. Today, we face a huge gap between who we are and who we want to be simply because we can actually see that gap better than ever before. By just opening Instagram or reading Facebook posts, we see a different, perhaps ideal, self we wish we were.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“If you put a frog in water that is already boiling, it will jump right out from the sheer pain and collision of senses. But if you put a frog in water at room temperature, then steadily raise the heat one degree at a time until it is boiling, the frog will slowly but eventually die. Our culture–us–we’re that frog right now, thinking, This is nice and cozy, but the heat has been climbing. This book is me saying, Wait a minute. It’s starting to get a little warm in here. The values and pace of our culture, the speed at which it is moving, the demands and pressure we all collectively feel, the ethos of hustle injected into us all at birth–it’s boiling us alive. But we don’t notice it because it has happened steadily over the last century or so.”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“Not unlike Jesus in Luke: “Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed” (Luke 5:16). Jesus voluntarily withdrew to the lonely places. On purpose.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“spiritually thin and malnourished. Henri Nouwen, one of my favorite spiritual thinkers, said about his experience with silence and solitude: “Solitude is not a private therapeutic place. Rather, it is the place of conversion, the place where the old self dies and the new self is born.”8 It’s not a therapeutic place. It’s where you go to die.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“What if God doesn't want me to do big things for Him? Like, at all? What if He just wants me to talk to Him and know Him and live an ordinary live where I love Him and my neighbours well?”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“I'd thought that when I started to follow Jesus, things were supposed to get better. If that was true, why was it getting worse? Why did it hurt more instead of less? Maybe it's because when we're dead, we can't feel anything. But once we're alive, that means our senses are too. Can a dead person feel chaos?”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“And frankly the people who seem to best understand that we are creatures of love and desire, not thoughts, are the current giant tech companies of the world. Think about how Apple exists with a temple-like space (tell me their retail stores don't feel so "set apart" from the ordinary retail design that it doesn't immediately conjure up sacred feelings) where you go to sacrifice (enormously large portions of your money) to obtain that which you are looking for - connection, meaning and depth. People stand in line all night, some even camping out on the sidewalk, for the latest device that offers those implicitly understood benefits. This phone can, and will, be more than a phone. I think it's even fair to say that Apple is a religion with Steve Jobs as a priest (who has become a venerated secular saint after his death), mediating between man and God to give us what we want. Connection. Power. God-like knowledge of good and evil. And we take the phone, and we crouch and bend over. Usually with heads bowed. Laser focused on something. Blocking out all around us. We are silent and solemn. Tending not to speak. And then we perform a certain behaviour over and over and over again. Sound familiar? Swipe.”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“Our current hustle culture is no different; it’s all about exceeding limits. It’s about striving for that false freedom to do this. Eat that. Work this way. Just. Work. Harder. Network more. Just buy my masterclass and you, too, can be a millionaire by age nineteen.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“There is an ancient call in us that taps the spigot of our desires until the ritual becomes worshipful and mundane”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“We’ve created an assembly-line Christianity. Instead of investing in relationships and one-on-one interactions with other people, we just bring our friends to church and place them on the conveyor belt of the “Sunday service,” where in ninety minutes they can get a good spiritual feeling, sing some songs, hear an encouraging message, get a coffee, and then hear the pastor tell them that if they want to follow Jesus to “pray this prayer.” It’d take too much time to connect each one of those people with another person in the church and maybe have a family or person “adopt” this person spiritually to walk with them, ask them hard questions, eat meals together . . . so let’s just have everyone repeat after me. Now, do I think Jesus is still active and alive and present and moving here? Of course. But I think that’s despite us, not because of us.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“Economist John Keynes said in 1915, “For the first time since his creation man will be faced with his real, his permanent problem,” and that is “how to occupy the leisure.”2 Am I the only one who will say that my main problem in life is not “how to occupy the leisure”? In fact, I say, What leisure? Keynes was vastly wrong. That’s not what happened. In an article highlighting these developments, Derek Thompson noted one large change no one saw coming: how work itself and our view of it evolved. Work jumped from being a means of “material production” to being much more about “identity production.”3 In other words, work used to be about making things. Then all of a sudden, work was about making us.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“Here’s the peculiar truth—what forms our identities are the million, tiny, micro-sized actions we all do every day without realizing it or thinking twice about it.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“The truth is, we are informationally obese. Gorging ourselves on information until we are sick and unhealthy. Just one more podcast, one more YouTube video, one more hack to achieve a more optimized life. But we keep wondering, Why isn’t anything changing? Why do we achieve a goal or a dream yet still feel as unfilled and anxious as ever?”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
“Today, we face a huge gap between who we are and who we want to be simply because we can actually see that gap better than ever before. By just opening Instagram or reading Facebook posts, we see a different, perhaps ideal, self we wish we were.”
― To Hell with the Hustle
― To Hell with the Hustle
“Rhythm is living life with music and cadence. It’s coming back to something big or small, again and again, as a way of remembering and reminding.”
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
― To Hell with the Hustle: Reclaiming Your Life in an Overworked, Overspent, and Overconnected World
