There was a morning in the French Alps when everything worked at the same time.
The solar panels were producing more than we needed. The spring water was running clear through the pipes we had laid by hand. The garden was at the height of its summer abundance. My daughters were somewhere on the hillside. And I was standing at the edge of the terrace with a coffee, looking at something we had built with our own hands, thinking: this is exactly what I was trying to build toward.
It was also, I understood slowly and then all at once, the wrong size.
Not the wrong vision. The wrong size. One family doing work that required a community to do with the resilience that genuine sustainability demands. Beautiful in its best moments and genuinely precarious in its worst, and the difference between those moments was always the same: whether the people were healthy, present, and uninterrupted by the ten thousand things a life with children in the mountains will regularly throw at you.
The homestead was the right dream at the wrong scale. This book is the right scale.
We Had Time All Along is written for the reader who has reclaimed their time and is now standing in the spaciousness of sovereignty asking the question that sovereignty makes possible. Not how do I survive. Not how do I achieve financial freedom. But: once I have it, what do I build with it?
The answer is not more personal wealth. It is community. The intentional village of one hundred and fifty people who know each other's names, built on Bitcoin sound money first principles, local food production, revived craft and manufacturing, and the Maslow-foundation model that provides every member the base from which genuine development becomes possible.
The book covers the Bitcoin inheritance rethought — not a lump sum at death but a time-distributed smart contract endowment funding a multigenerational project across time horizons no fiat currency can reach. The four-layer food model, from the productive farm and communal cafeteria to the public bistro and high-end dining experience. The workshop that brings back the cobbler, the weaver, the woodworker — all viable again in a deflationary environment where repair is rational and quality is the sensible choice.
The Bitcoin citadel — the practical vision of acquiring a depopulated small town whose farmland and empty shopfronts are available at prices that reflect seventy years of fiat logic and none of the potential that sound money makes visible. The long time preference civilisation — the orchards planted for the next generation, the seed library compounding in biological intelligence across decades, the apprentice learning what took a lifetime to accumulate.
Written in the same first-person voice as the previous book — from the Alps to the noodle shop in Chiang Mai to the farmhouse in Portugal where three generations ate food grown on land their great-grandmother made impossible to sell.
Not how much money do I have. Not how many months do I have.
What do I leave?
The answer is not money. It is a community. And the community begins with a single seed and the understanding that you already know enough to plant it.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Seller: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, United Kingdom
PAP. Condition: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000. Seller Inventory # L2-9798252519449
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Seller: CitiRetail, Stevenage, United Kingdom
Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. There was a morning in the French Alps when everything worked at the same time.The solar panels were producing more than we needed. The spring water was running clear through the pipes we had laid by hand. The garden was at the height of its summer abundance. My daughters were somewhere on the hillside. And I was standing at the edge of the terrace with a coffee, looking at something we had built with our own hands, thinking: this is exactly what I was trying to build toward.It was also, I understood slowly and then all at once, the wrong size.Not the wrong vision. The wrong size. One family doing work that required a community to do with the resilience that genuine sustainability demands. Beautiful in its best moments and genuinely precarious in its worst, and the difference between those moments was always the same: whether the people were healthy, present, and uninterrupted by the ten thousand things a life with children in the mountains will regularly throw at you.The homestead was the right dream at the wrong scale. This book is the right scale.We Had Time All Along is written for the reader who has reclaimed their time and is now standing in the spaciousness of sovereignty asking the question that sovereignty makes possible. Not how do I survive. Not how do I achieve financial freedom. But: once I have it, what do I build with it?The answer is not more personal wealth. It is community. The intentional village of one hundred and fifty people who know each other's names, built on Bitcoin sound money first principles, local food production, revived craft and manufacturing, and the Maslow-foundation model that provides every member the base from which genuine development becomes possible.The book covers the Bitcoin inheritance rethought - not a lump sum at death but a time-distributed smart contract endowment funding a multigenerational project across time horizons no fiat currency can reach. The four-layer food model, from the productive farm and communal cafeteria to the public bistro and high-end dining experience. The workshop that brings back the cobbler, the weaver, the woodworker - all viable again in a deflationary environment where repair is rational and quality is the sensible choice.The Bitcoin citadel - the practical vision of acquiring a depopulated small town whose farmland and empty shopfronts are available at prices that reflect seventy years of fiat logic and none of the potential that sound money makes visible. The long time preference civilisation - the orchards planted for the next generation, the seed library compounding in biological intelligence across decades, the apprentice learning what took a lifetime to accumulate.Written in the same first-person voice as the previous book - from the Alps to the noodle shop in Chiang Mai to the farmhouse in Portugal where three generations ate food grown on land their great-grandmother made impossible to sell.Not how much money do I have. Not how many months do I have.What do I leave?The answer is not money. It is a community. And the community begins with a single seed and the understanding that you already know enough to plant it. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9798252519449
Quantity: 1 available