You're running out of time
People flex watches. I use mine to remind me never to sell my hours again.
People flex with watches.
But owning your time is the real flex.
Most people signal status with what is on their wrist.
I use mine to remember I never want to sell my time again.
I own three watches:
• A $1,000 Apple Watch Ultra
• A $5,000 Breitling
• A $500 Tissot
You would think I wear the Breitling the most.
I do not.
The Apple Watch used to run my life.
Notifications. Activity rings. Constant pressure to do more.
It made me productive.
It did not make me free.
Then two clients came along.
We built and scaled their crypto platform.
Those projects alone brought over $200,000 for Alpha Efficiency.
As a thank you, they sent me the Tissot.
Paid for in crypto. (reminder that tech moves fast)
That watch did something the Apple Watch never could:
It disconnected my self worth from the clock.
I stopped timing my workouts.
Stopped checking messages every few minutes.
Stopped living by notifications.
Every time I look at that Tissot, it reminds me:
• Technology should serve you, not own you
• One right deal can buy you years of optionality
• Your time is a reflection of the clients you choose
Later I bought the Breitling to prove something.
To myself. To the industry. To people who play status games.
It mostly sits at home now.
Because the real status upgrade was not the luxury brand. It was a regulated nervous system.
Learning how to get clients that pay you so well that you stop trading hours for money.
That is the game I care about teaching.
If you want more clients like that, and fewer that drain your energy and calendar,
I broke down my systems inside Infinite Deals.
It is where I document how I:
• Attract high ticket clients online
• Buy back more of my own time each year
• Turn a few great projects into multiple six figures
The watch is just a reminder.
The real asset is the skill of getting the right deals.
All people who sign up for my Cyber Monday Substack deal get Infinite Deals ($250 value).

