Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Reclaiming Time from Consumer Culture

Recognizing that ethical consumption includes protecting time and attention from the constant pull of wanting, shopping, and consuming.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana fiercely protected her time for study and thought, recognizing that time is the scarcest and most valuable resource. Consumer culture doesn't just demand money; it demands our constant attention, emotional energy, and time through endless messaging, social comparison, and the labor of shopping and managing possessions. Ethical consumption must address this temporal dimension. It means setting boundaries on exposure to marketing, curating your media environment, and actively resisting the cultural message that shopping and acquiring are forms of leisure or self-care. It means questioning subscription services and planned obsolescence that demand your time managing replacements. When you reduce consumption, you reclaim hours—hours previously spent shopping, comparing, wanting, managing stuff. Sor Juana used her time to think, to write, to correspond, to contribute to human knowledge. The ethical consumption practice asks: What would you do with your time if you stopped wanting? What thoughts would emerge? What relationships would deepen? How much of your life are you trading to consumer culture's attention economy?

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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