What if the most valuable things in life were the ones you could never buy?
In Something Worth Buying, acclaimed writer Zachary R. Holderle invites readers into a quiet revolution of meaning, attention, and presence.
It's not a book about business-it's a book about worth.
Not about money, but about the currency that matters most: time, awareness, care, and love.
With a tone that feels both intimate and revelatory, Holderle dissects the world's obsession with value-showing that the best purchases aren't transactions, but transformations.
Each page offers a mirror for modern life: our restless pursuit of "more," our hunger for validation, and our forgetting of what was always free.
Across twelve luminous lessons, Something Worth Buying becomes a spiritual manual disguised as a philosophy of commerce.
From "The Price of Meaning" to "Gratitude as Profit" and "Time Is Tender," it gently reminds us that attention is the real wealth-and that every choice is a kind of purchase.
It asks:
What are you spending your life on?
And is it worth the cost?
This is not self-help.
It's self-remembering.
A reorientation toward the sacred in the ordinary, the handmade in the hurried, the meaningful in the marketed.
Holderle's prose glows with precision and peace, offering the reader not just insight but relief-a deep breath in a world addicted to hurry.
Perfect for readers of The War of Art, The Untethered Soul, or The Practice by Seth Godin, this book speaks to creators, dreamers, and doers who crave authenticity in a time of noise.
It's for the artist selling their first piece.
The entrepreneur questioning their purpose.
The seeker longing to feel alive in their own work again.
Because in the end, every moment is a transaction-and every breath is a purchase of the present.
The question Something Worth Buying leaves you with is simple and unforgettable:
If you could only buy one more thing with your time,
what would it be?
Related Subjects
Philosophy