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MASTERFUL PERSONALITY - 24. OUR MOST PRECIOUS ASSET - TIME - Orison Swett Marden
- 2025/05/06
- 再生時間: 13 分
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MASTERFUL PERSONALITY - 24. OUR MOST PRECIOUS ASSET - TIME - Orison Swett Marden - HQ Full Book.In Chapter 24 of Masterful Personality, Orison Swett Marden turns his unwavering focus to what he declares as the most invaluable resource granted to man—time. With eloquence and urgency, he argues that time is not merely a backdrop to our ambitions and endeavors but the very substance from which our entire lives are fashioned. Marden does not speak of time abstractly. Instead, he speaks of it as life itself, and he implores his readers to treat it with the reverence it deserves. The Call to GreatnessEach Morning The chapter opens with a vivid anecdote: the renowned scientist Professor Tyndall received his finest inspiration from a humble, semi-literate servant who woke him each day with the firm declaration: “Rise, sir, it is seven o'clock and you have great work to do today.” Marden finds in this simple ritual a powerful motto—one that encapsulates the attitude one should carry into each day. It is not merely a call to awaken from sleep, but a command to awaken to purpose. Each day, he insists, holds vast and untapped potential, waiting to be seized. Most people, unfortunately, allow this treasure to slip through their fingers, undervaluing the very currency of their existence. Time Is Life: The Inseparable ConnectionMarden makes a bold assertion: wasting time is equivalent to wasting life. One cannot be cavalier about time and expect to live a meaningful, productive existence. He calls it a form of life-suicide—a conscious, or unconscious, erasure of opportunity. This notion echoes throughout the chapter like a refrain: to kill time is to kill yourself in installments. This idea is not just philosophical; it is highly practical. The successful and unsuccessful, he argues, can often be distinguished by their regard for time. The wise see time as a sacred, limited resource—more valuable than gold or possessions. The foolish, on the other hand, squander it casually, unaware of what they forfeit. Measuring Character by the Use of TimeOne of Marden’s most compelling arguments is the idea that the value one places on time is a mirror of one’s character and destiny. Those who make use of their spare moments—reading, learning, taking notes, reflecting—are those who are destined to succeed. Conversely, those who waste time in idle conversation, shallow entertainment, or meaningless distractions demonstrate a weak character, indifferent to their future. He compares successful people to misers—not in wealth, but in how they hoard their minutes. For Marden, even a minute has value if put to productive use. He highlights the importance of cultivating habits like carrying useful reading material, taking notes during reflection, and maintaining a protective boundary around one's productive hours. These habits, small as they may seem, are the foundation stones of a great career and a meaningful life. The Myth of “Someday” and the Danger of DriftMany individuals, Marden says, fall into the trap of believing that real life begins “someday”—when they get a better job, when they are richer, when they are married, or when circumstances improve. This yearning for a future that never arrives is, in his eyes, a silent killer of time and therefore of life itself. It drains the present of its vitality. "Wishing away time is wishing away opportunity," he writes. This isn’t just waste—it’s an act of self-destruction. People long for the weekend, for vacation, for retirement, unaware that in doing so they are longing for the end of their own lives, bypassing the opportunities of today. The Thieves of TimeMarden offers a critique of what he calls “time thieves”—people who impose on others' valuable time through idle chatter, gossip, or meaningless visits. He warns against allowing others to steal time simply because we are too polite to say no. Many capable individuals, he observes, fall short of their potential because they are too easily accessible. They lack the "stamina and tact" to protect their creative hours from interruption. He encourages readers to adopt firm personal policies—such as denying access during working hours or politely excusing themselves from time-wasting encounters. This is not a call to isolation or rudeness. Rather, it is a plea to recognize that every moment has a cost, and unless we treat our time as sacred, we will continue to fall short of our purpose. The Greatest Inheritance: Time and OpportunityMarden closes the chapter on a profoundly optimistic note. He reminds his readers—particularly the young and the disadvantaged—that the greatest inheritance anyone could ever receive is time and the chance to make good. He recalls the humble origins of great figures like Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Edison, who had no advantages but made remarkable use of their hours and opportunities. What set them apart was not privilege, but their understanding that...