A Summary of "Four Thousand Weeks" by Oliver Burkeman

post by Magnus (tommy-biggnus) · 2022-04-02T02:17:22.376Z · LW · GW · 1 comments

This is my first post here, so please don't bully me. I know all you math-boys with your big, wrinkly brains could do me a serious bruising. I beg thee mercy, for I am but a first time poster. 

First things first - Oliver boy, I am on to you. I see what you've done here, disguising your work of legitimate philosophy in self-help's clothing.

Just when I thought I could listen to another audiobook telling me to take cold showers, drink green juice, and meditate all with a "scientists have even discovered..." sprinkled atop, you snuck one past me. 

Not only did you avoid mentioning green juice even once, but you avoided laundry lists of life-hacks all together. Instead, you decided to write a thought-provoking analysis of our finitude relying only on appeals to my common sense, using only observations that any typical human would have. 

All I was looking for were some new platitudes to add to my "Inspirational Quotes" document, but you just had to really educate me on how think about time management. You had to make me change my opinions on commitment, pacing, rest, and time's importance in being human.

I'll let you get away with it this time, educating me, changing my perspective for the better. I just hope next time you can write something that promises me the impossible via a series of bizarre rituals. Improving my work life balance by eating more broccoli, maybe? Up to you. 

In all seriousness, this is a really good book. The audiobook is about six hours. I would recommend it.

 I've included my summary of the book below. I've broken it down into a few different categories. The summary is chronological. 


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comment by Akiyama · 2022-08-28T09:29:50.001Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

This was a useful review, thank you