I spent my career in C-suite finance and operations roles — work that comes down to deciding where a limited resource goes: protecting it from waste, weighing what it could earn elsewhere, letting it compound, and making sure it's actually put to use. Then one unremarkable week it occurred to me that I'd never once applied any of that to the most limited resource I have. My money was managed with intent. My time simply leaked.
Rare Practice came out of that gap. The idea is almost annoyingly simple: spend your time the way a careful investor spends money. Decide what it's for. Protect it from the things that quietly drain it. Put it where it compounds. Most advice tells you to move faster — this is about choosing what's worth doing at all, then doing it daily until it holds.
I'm not writing this from the finish line. I'm a step or two ahead on the same road, building the thing I wish I'd had and using it as I go. That's deliberate. I'd rather show you a practice I'm actually living than sell you a transformation I'm not.
Two beliefs hold it together. Discipline beats inspiration, because inspiration never shows up on a wet Tuesday. And structure reduces fear — it turns "I should change my life" into "I know the next small thing to do."
That's what the Time Leak Audit and Greer are for. The audit shows you where your hours actually go. Greer helps you protect the ones that matter, and nudges you when you drift. Start with the audit — it's free, and it takes about ten minutes.