Quotes from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition

Charles Eisenstein ·  496 pages

Rating: (0.9K votes)


“When everything is subject to money, then the scarcity of money makes everything scarce, including the basis of human life and happiness. Such is the life of the slave—one whose actions are compelled by threat to survival. Perhaps the deepest indication of our slavery is the monetization of time.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“The present convergence of crises––in money, energy, education, health, water, soil, climate, politics, the environment, and more––is a birth crisis, expelling us from the old world into a new.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“We have bigger houses but smaller families;
more conveniences, but less time;
We have more degrees, but less sense;
more knowledge, but less judgment;
more experts, but more problems;
more medicines, but less healthiness;
We’ve been all the way to the moon and back,
but have trouble crossing the street to meet
the new neighbor.
We’ve built more computers to hold more
information to produce more copies than ever,
but have less communications;
We have become long on quantity,
but short on quality.
These times are times of fast foods;
but slow digestion;
Tall man but short character;
Steep profits but shallow relationships.
It is time when there is much in the window,
but nothing in the room.

--authorship unknown
from Sacred Economics”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“When we must pay the true price for the depletion of nature’s gifts, materials will become more precious to us, and economic logic will reinforce, and not contradict, our heart’s desire to treat the world with reverence and, when we receive nature’s gifts, to use them well.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“How beautiful can life be? We hardly dare imagine it.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition



“The financial crisis we are facing today arises from the fact that there is almost no more social, cultural, natural, and spiritual capital left to convert into money.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“Ultimately, work on self is inseperable from work in the world. Each mirrors the other; each is a vehicle for the other. When we change ourselves, our values and actions change as well. When we do work in the world, internal issues arise that we must face or be rendered ineffective.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“Contemporaneous with the financial crisis we have an ecological crisis and a health crisis. They are intimately interlinked. We cannot convert much more of the earth into money, or much more of our health into money, before the basis of life itself is threatened.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“Perhaps the deepest indication of our slavery is the monetization of time. It is a phenomenon with roots deeper than our money system, for it depends on the prior quantification of time. An animal or a child has “all the time in the world.” The same was apparently true for Stone Age peoples, who usually had very loose concepts of time and rarely were in a hurry. Primitive languages often lacked tenses, and sometimes lacked even words for “yesterday” or “tomorrow.” The comparative nonchalance primitive people had toward time is still apparent today in rural, more traditional parts of the world. Life moves faster in the big city, where we are always in a hurry because time is scarce. But in the past, we experienced time as abundant. The more monetized society is, the more anxious and hurried its citizens. In parts of the world that are still somewhat outside the money economy, where subsistence farming still exists and where neighbors help each other, the pace of life is slower, less hurried. In rural Mexico, everything is done mañana. A Ladakhi peasant woman interviewed in Helena Norberg-Hodge’s film Ancient Futures sums it all up in describing her city-dwelling sister: “She has a rice cooker, a car, a telephone—all kinds of time-saving devices. Yet when I visit her, she is always so busy we barely have time to talk.” For the animal, child, or hunter-gatherer, time is essentially infinite. Today its monetization has subjected it, like the rest, to scarcity. Time is life. When we experience time as scarce, we experience life as short and poor. If you were born before adult schedules invaded childhood and children were rushed around from activity to activity, then perhaps you still remember the subjective eternity of childhood, the afternoons that stretched on forever, the timeless freedom of life before the tyranny of calendar and clocks. “Clocks,” writes John Zerzan, “make time scarce and life short.” Once quantified, time too could be bought and sold, and the scarcity of all money-linked commodities afflicted time as well. “Time is money,” the saying goes, an identity confirmed by the metaphor “I can’t afford the time.” If the material world”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“When you hear the phrase “rescue the financial system,” translate it in your mind into “keep the debts on the books.” They are trying to find a way for you (and debtor nations too) to keep paying and for the debt to keep growing.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition



“In the same vein, the problem in economic life is supposedly greed, both outside ourselves in the form of all those greedy people and within ourselves in the form of our own greedy tendencies. We like to imagine that we ourselves are not so greedy—maybe we have greedy impulses, but we keep them under control. Unlike some people! Some people don’t keep their greed in check. They are lacking in something fundamental that you and I have, some basic decency, basic goodness. They are, in a word, Bad. If they can’t learn to restrain their desires, to make do with less, then we’ll have to force them to. Clearly, the paradigm of greed is rife with judgment of others, and with self-judgment as well. Our self-righteous anger and hatred of the greedy harbor the secret fear that we are no better than they are. It is the hypocrite who is the most zealous in the persecution of evil. Externalizing the enemy gives expression to unresolved feelings of anger. In a way, this is a necessity: the consequences of keeping them bottled up or directed inward are horrific. But there came a time in my life when I was through hating, through with the war against the self, through with the struggle to be good, and through with the pretense that I was any better than anyone else. I believe humanity, collectively, is nearing such a time as well. Ultimately, greed is a red herring, itself a symptom and not a cause of a deeper problem. To blame greed and to fight it by intensifying the program of self-control is to intensify the war against the self, which is just another expression of the war against nature and the war against the other that lies at the base of the present crisis of civilization.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“McMansions in sprawling suburbs, without mountains of unnecessary packaging, without giant mechanized monofarms, without energy-hogging big-box stores, without electronic billboards, without endless piles of throwaway junk, without the overconsumption of consumer goods no one really needs is not an impoverished world. I disagree with those environmentalists who say we are going to have to make do with less. In fact, we are going to make do with more: more beauty, more community, more fulfillment, more art, more music, and material objects that are fewer in number but superior in utility and aesthetics. The cheap stuff that fills our lives today, however great its quantity, can only cheapen life.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“A fundamental premise of this book is that human beings naturally desire to give. We are born into gratitude: the knowledge we have received and the desire to give in turn. Far from nudging reluctant people to give unto others against their lazy impulses, today’s economy pressures us to deny our innate generosity and channel our gifts instead toward the perpetuation of a system that serves almost no one. A sacred”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“Of all the things that human beings make and do for each other, it is the unquantifiable ones that contribute most to human happiness.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“We are starving for spiritual nourishment. We are starving for a life that is personal, connected, and meaningful. By choice, that is where we will direct our energy. When we do so, community will arise anew because this spiritual nourishment can only come to us as a gift, as part of a web of gifts in which we participate as giver and receiver. Whether or not it rides the vehicle of something bought, it is irreducibly personal and unique.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition



“Yet the knowledge of what is possible lives on inside each of us, inextinguishable. Let us trust this knowing, hold each other in it, and organize our lives around it. Do we really have any choice, as the old world falls apart? Shall we settle for anything less than a sacred world?”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“When what we offer is sacred to us, then the only honorable way to offer it is as a gift.5 No price can be high enough to reflect the sacredness of the infinite.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“Another way to see the unexpected fruits that arise from the mystery is that when we live in the spirit of the gift, magic happens. Gift mentality is a kind of faith, a kind of surrender—and that is a prerequisite for miracles to arise. From the Gift, we become capable of the impossible.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“Ultimately, what economics attempts to measure, underneath money, is the totality of all that human beings make and do for each other.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“The one who bows into service is an artist. To see work as sacred is to bow into service to it, and thus become its instrument. More specifically and somewhat paradoxically, we become the instrument of that which we create.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition



“The hippies saw it and lived it for a few shining moments, but the old stories were too strong. Instead of the hippies pulling us all into a new world, we dragged them back into ours. The”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“And given how much of the evil and ugliness of the present world can be traced to money, can you imagine what the world will be like when money has been transformed?”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“I remember as a child hearing of the horrors of life in the Soviet Union. There was supposedly only one kind of store, a gigantic windowless dispensary staffed by listless, surly functionaries selling cheaply made, generic goods. It sounds a lot like Wal-Mart.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“Everyone is a puppet, but there are no puppet-masters.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“There are puppet-masters, but they are systems and ideologies, not people. As”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition



“The intuitions developed over centuries will be true no longer. No longer will greed, scarcity, the quantification and commoditization of all things, the “time preference” for immediate consumption, the discounting of the future for the sake of the present, the fundamental opposition between financial interest and the common good, or the equation of security with accumulation be axiomatic.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“Through a million little choices every day, we are cashing in the earth.”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“The truth is, has always been, and always will be that we are utterly and hopelessly dependent on each other and on nature. Nor”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“Accordingly, to create objects with soul, objects for a rich and beautiful world, we must invest them with life, self, and humanity; in other words, we must invest them with something of our selves. No”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition


“We are born creators, here to achieve the exuberant expression of our gifts. The”
― Charles Eisenstein, quote from Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition



About the author

Charles Eisenstein
See more on GoodReads

Popular quotes

“Why so surprised, White Wolf?” he murmurs, smiling a little. There is something in the way he says my Elite name, a secret sweetness.
Why so surprised that you are worthy?
― Marie Lu, quote from The Rose Society


“I wanna say I am somebody. I wanna say it on subway, TV, movie, LOUD. I see the pink faces in suits look over top of my head. I watch myself disappear in their eyes, their tesses. I talk loud but still I don't exist.”
― Sapphire, quote from Push


“You are going to love me until I die. I’m going to make you love me even if it hurts, and when it hurts, I’m going to make it better, Brooke.”
― Katy Evans, quote from Mine


“This is a neighborhood where underwear sags low. For instance, ole Mr Deutschman lives up here, who used to be upstanding and decent.”
― D.B.C. Pierre, quote from Vernon God Little


“I don't like mysteries, which is why I want to solve them. It bothers me that there are things I don't know.”
― Nelson DeMille, quote from Plum Island


Interesting books

Scroll of Saqqara
(646)
Scroll of Saqqara
by Pauline Gedge
Sealed with a Curse
(3.8K)
Sealed with a Curse
by Cecy Robson
Invasion of the Overworld:  A Minecraft Novel
(1.1K)
Invasion of the Over...
by Mark Cheverton
Tunneling to the Center of the Earth: Stories
(1.9K)
Tunneling to the Cen...
by Kevin Wilson
Refuge
(472)
Refuge
by N.G. Osborne
A Love Story Starring My Dead Best Friend
(2.1K)

About BookQuoters

BookQuoters is a community of passionate readers who enjoy sharing the most meaningful, memorable and interesting quotes from great books. As the world communicates more and more via texts, memes and sound bytes, short but profound quotes from books have become more relevant and important. For some of us a quote becomes a mantra, a goal or a philosophy by which we live. For all of us, quotes are a great way to remember a book and to carry with us the author’s best ideas.

We thoughtfully gather quotes from our favorite books, both classic and current, and choose the ones that are most thought-provoking. Each quote represents a book that is interesting, well written and has potential to enhance the reader’s life. We also accept submissions from our visitors and will select the quotes we feel are most appealing to the BookQuoters community.

Founded in 2023, BookQuoters has quickly become a large and vibrant community of people who share an affinity for books. Books are seen by some as a throwback to a previous world; conversely, gleaning the main ideas of a book via a quote or a quick summary is typical of the Information Age but is a habit disdained by some diehard readers. We feel that we have the best of both worlds at BookQuoters; we read books cover-to-cover but offer you some of the highlights. We hope you’ll join us.