how to close an uppababy stroller UPPAbaby Cruz V3 Stroller
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how to close an uppababy stroller

how to close an uppababy stroller UPPAbaby Cruz V3 Stroller

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how to close an uppababy stroller UPPAbaby Cruz V3 Strollerby UPPAbaby Babesta Pick Best Full Size Single Stroller for NYC Families Category: Full size strollers Single strollers Travel systems Birth to toddler strollers Certifications: GREENGUARD Gold JPMA Certified REACH certified leather Warranty: 3 year transferable The UPPAbaby Cruz V3 is a 26. 5 lb full size single stroller suitable from birth (with the included infant insert) to 50 lbs. Its fully reversible, lay flat seat, 4 position one hand recline,

by UPPAbaby  |  Babesta Pick — Best Full-Size Single Stroller for NYC Families

Category: Full-size strollers  |  Single strollers  |  Travel systems  |  Birth-to-toddler strollers

Certifications: GREENGUARD® Gold  |  JPMA Certified  |  REACH-certified leather

Warranty: 3-year transferable

The UPPAbaby Cruz V3 is a 26.5 lb full-size single stroller suitable from birth (with the included infant insert) to 50 lbs. Its fully reversible, lay-flat seat, 4-position one-hand recline, integrated foot barrier for carriage mode, and magnetic harness buckle make it one of the most genuinely newborn-ready full-size strollers on the market — no separate bassinet required for the first weeks. As NYC’s expert baby boutique, Babesta considers the Cruz V3 the sweet spot for families who want full-size quality and a premium push without the bulk of a modular platform stroller.

The Cruz V3 is the ideal pick for first-time parents expecting one child who want a stroller that works from the hospital through preschool, delivers a smooth ride on NYC sidewalks, and still folds compactly enough for a car trunk or elevator lobby. If you’re planning to expand to two or more children in a single stroller, consider the UPPAbaby Vista V3 instead.

 

Specifications

Stroller weight (frame + seat)

26.5 lbs

Frame weight only

17 lbs

Seat weight only

9.5 lbs

Unfolded dimensions

37.5″ L × 22.5″ W × 41.8″ H

Folded dimensions (with seat)

17.5″ L × 22.5″ W × 33″ H

Folded dimensions (without seat)

13.5″ L × 22.5″ W × 30″ H

Fold type

One-step trigger fold; footrest and bumper bar tuck in automatically; self-standing

Suitable from birth?

Yes — with included infant insert in lay-flat reclined seat + integrated foot barrier

Suitable without accessories?

From birth with infant insert; up to 50 lbs

Max child weight

50 lbs (approx. age 4–5)

Basket weight capacity

30 lbs — extra-large, easy-access

Seat orientation

Reversible: forward-facing or parent-facing

Seat recline positions

4 positions, one-hand adjustment; full lay-flat for sleep

Leg rest

Adjustable with one hand

Handlebar

Telescoping, one-hand height adjustment; REACH-certified leather grip

Suspension

Enhanced FlexRide™ — all-wheel, frame-integrated for smooth city ride

Tires

Never-flat polyurethane; front wheel lock with visual indicator; reflective accents for low-light visibility

Canopy

UPF 50+ water-repellent; integrated sun shield; zip-out extension; mesh ventilation panels

Harness

5-point with magnetic buckle; infant-to-toddler tapered fit; no-rethread adjustment

Frame material

Durable aluminum; painted finish

Seat fabric

100% polyester; GREENGUARD® Gold certified; premium fabrics with leather details

Certifications

GREENGUARD® Gold; JPMA certified; REACH-certified leather

Warranty

3-year transferable

Included in box

Stroller, infant insert, bug shield, rain shield

 

Best For / Not For

Best For: First-time parents planning on one child, families who want a full-size premium push without a modular platform, parents building a UPPAbaby travel system with the Mesa or Aria infant car seat, elevator-building NYC residents, and anyone who needs a newborn-ready stroller without buying a separate bassinet. Also strong for parents who walk long distances daily and need a stroller that handles NYC sidewalks and park terrain comfortably.

Not For: Families planning to convert to a double stroller (choose the Vista V3 instead), parents in walkup buildings who need a carry-up stroller (the Joolz Aer2 is better for that), or parents who need an airplane-overhead-bin stroller. At 26.5 lbs it is a daily city stroller, not a travel stroller.

Available Colors & Pricing

Colors

Jake (black), Callum (blue), Greyson (charcoal), Evelyn, Julian, Owen, Savannah (white/grey), Ada — all $899.99

Frame options

Graphite or Carbon (matte) — matched per colorway

Availability

Most colors in stock at Babesta; allow 2–3 weeks for order fulfillment

 

Is it suitable for my baby's age?

Newborn (0–3 months)

Yes — seat reclines fully flat with included infant insert and integrated foot barrier for carriage mode. No separate bassinet required for newborn use (though the V3 Bassinet is available separately for maximum lie-flat comfort).

Infant (3–12 months)

Yes — seat reclined or semi-reclined, infant insert still in use, compatible with Mesa or Aria infant car seat for travel system use.

Toddler (1–4 years)

Yes — forward or parent-facing, 4-position one-hand recline, adjustable leg rest, magnetic harness, up to 50 lbs.

 

Is it good for NYC / city use?

Yes — the Cruz V3 is one of Babesta’s strongest recommendations for NYC parents who stroll daily. The Enhanced FlexRide suspension handles cracked sidewalks and dropped curbs better than most full-size strollers, and the never-flat tires mean no emergency trips to get a flat fixed mid-walk. The one-step fold is quick and intuitive; the footrest and bumper bar tuck in automatically so there are no extra steps when you’re managing a baby and a cab door at the same time.

The 22.5″ width is notably narrower than the Vista V3 (25.7″), which matters in NYC: restaurant aisles, elevator doors, and narrow hallway entries are all more manageable. The 30 lb basket is best-in-class for a single stroller and handles a full grocery bag without issue.

NYC note: The Cruz V3 folds compactly and self-stands, but it is not a subway-carry stroller. It works best for families with a car, a building elevator, or a ground-floor entrance. For subway-heavy days, many Cruz V3 families pair it with a lightweight like the Joolz Aer2.

 

Quick Comparison: Cruz V3 vs. Key Alternatives

Feature

Cruz V3

Vista V3

Joolz Aer2

Dragonfly

Weight

26.5 lbs

27.6 lbs

14.3 lbs

With seat 21.8 lbs; with bassinet 23.1lbs

Basket capacity

30 lbs

30 lbs

17.6 lbs

22 lbs; rear pocket 5lbs

Newborn-ready (no extra purchase)

Yes — incl. infant insert

No

Yes — incl. baby net

Yes when purchased with bassinet

Converts to double

No

Yes

No

No

Subway/walkup friendly

Manageable

Harder

Best in class

Good

 

Car Seat Compatibility

No adapter needed

UPPAbaby Mesa, UPPAbaby Aria

Adapter required (sold separately)

Clek, Cybex, Bugaboo x Nuna

Bassinet compatible?

Yes — UPPAbaby Cruz V3 Bassinet attaches directly; sold separately

 

What’s Included

       UPPAbaby Cruz V3 stroller frame

       Full-size reversible toddler seat with lay-flat recline

       Infant insert (for newborn use from birth)

       Bug shield

       Rain shield

       3-year transferable warranty

 

Optional Add-Ons Available at Babesta

       UPPAbaby Cruz V3 Bassinet — for full lie-flat newborn use; attaches directly without adapters (strongly recommended for 0–3 months)

       UPPAbaby Mesa Infant Car Seat — clicks in without adapters for instant travel system

       UPPAbaby Aria Infant Car Seat — clicks in without adapters

       Car seat adapters for Clek, Cybex, Bugaboo x Nuna, Chicco, Maxi-Cosi, Peg Perego (sold separately per brand)

       PiggyBack® Ride-Along Board — for an older sibling standing at the back

       Cozy Ganoosh — footmuff/sleeping bag for cold NYC winters

       Cup holder and parent organizer accessories

 

Babesta Pick — Why We Carry It

The Cruz V3 solves a problem that a lot of NYC first-time parents don’t anticipate: the other premium single strollers in this price range either require you to buy a separate bassinet for newborn use, or they’re so light that the ride quality suffers on cracked sidewalks. The Cruz V3 does neither. The included infant insert plus the lay-flat seat means you genuinely can take it home from the hospital. The FlexRide suspension means the push is smooth enough that you’ll want to keep strolling — which in NYC, where parents walk miles a day, is not a small thing.

We’ve also found that the magnetic harness buckle is one of those features that sounds like marketing until you’ve wrestled a squirming 18-month-old into a conventional buckle in the rain outside a restaurant. After that, you will never want a non-magnetic buckle again.

The one trade-off we are honest about: if there’s any chance you’ll want a double stroller, the Cruz V3 cannot convert. In that case, the Vista V3 at the same $899.99 price is the smarter long-term investment. But for the family that is confident in one child and wants the best single full-size stroller in the UPPAbaby lineup, the Cruz V3 is it.

 

Babesta Services on This Purchase

When you buy the Cruz V3 from Babesta, you get:

       Free in-store assembly and full stroller demo — we walk you through every fold, recline, and harness adjustment

       Home delivery below Canal Street NYC (assembled) and same-day courier delivery in NYC/Brooklyn (unassembled)

       Hold it until you’re ready — buy now, take delivery when baby arrives, no rush

       Price match guarantee — found it cheaper? We’ll match it

       Registry support — add the Cruz V3 and compatible accessories to your Babesta registry with expert guidance

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use this stroller from birth without buying a bassinet?

Yes — the Cruz V3 is one of the only full-size strollers at this price point that is genuinely newborn-ready out of the box. The included infant insert, combined with the seat’s full lay-flat recline and integrated foot barrier, creates a carriage-mode position suitable from day one. That said, Babesta does recommend the separately sold UPPAbaby Cruz Bassinet for the first 3 months if you want true lie-flat comfort and a fully enclosed sleep environment.

What is the difference between the Cruz V3 and the Vista V3?

Both share the same FlexRide suspension, magnetic harness, canopy quality, and 30 lb basket. The key differences: the Cruz V3 is a single-only stroller (it cannot convert to a double), is 2 lbs lighter (26.5 vs. 27.6 lbs), and is 2.9″ narrower (22.8″ vs. 25.7″). The Vista V3 can expand to a double or triple stroller with accessories. If you might have a second child, choose the Vista V3. If you’re confident in one child and want a slightly lighter, narrower, more streamlined stroller, choose the Cruz V3. Babesta’s team can walk you through this decision in person.

Which infant car seats are compatible without adapters?

The UPPAbaby Mesa and UPPAbaby Aria click directly onto the Cruz V3 frame with no adapters needed, creating a seamless travel system. For Clek, Cybex, Bugaboo x Nuna, Chicco, Maxi-Cosi, and Peg Perego, brand-specific adapters are sold separately. Ask the Babesta team for the right adapter for your car seat brand.

Does the bassinet come included?

No — the UPPAbaby V3 Bassinet is sold separately. It attaches directly to the Cruz V3 frame without adapters. Babesta recommends it for the first 3 months, particularly for parents who want a dedicated sleep-safe lie-flat environment for their newborn.

Is it good for Central Park and outdoor walks?

Yes — the FlexRide suspension and never-flat tires handle grass, gravel, and mixed terrain well for everyday park use. The Cruz V3 is not a jogging stroller. For trail or beach use, stick to paved or packed surfaces.

Can I try it in person?

Yes — the Cruz V3 is on the floor at Babesta Tribeca, 56 Warren Street. Our team will walk you through the fold, the infant insert setup, the recline positions, and — if relevant — the side-by-side difference with the Vista V3 so you can decide between them confidently.

Can I put this on my baby registry?

Yes — the Cruz V3 is a top registry pick at Babesta. A Babesta registry comes with exclusive perks and services, and our team can advise on which accessories to register for from day one versus which ones to wait on based on your lifestyle.

Does it fit through a standard NYC doorway?

Yes — at 22.8″ wide, the Cruz V3 passes through standard 28″–32″ interior doorways, elevator doors, and most restaurant and retail aisles without issue. It is one of the narrower full-size strollers in its class.

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Lorraine Haataia, PhD
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
A guidebook for escaping the rat race
Format: Kindle
This book provides a completely new way of looking at your job and potential residual income. It's a guide to help you shift your focus to your residual income which can set you free. Our school system teaches kids that, until they're in their late teens or early 20s, they're going to spend their days in school and college. These habits of showing up and punching the clock (via attendance) are so ingrained by this point in life that few question whether there's another realistic option. And adults go into jobs that perpetuate this cycle of clocking in early in the morning and checking out late in the evening. Timothy Ferris shows that it is indeed possible to escape this rat race. He shows a clear step-by-step plan to do so. And it's there for the taking if you're bold enough to grab the steering wheel of your life. This is quite a comprehensive book discussing everything from your job transition to your travel, and how to set up your company and manage it without taking too much financial risk. He talks about guarding your time, which I believe is one of the most valuable points in the book. He mentions throughout the book strategies to reduce getting caught up in time-wasting activities such as meetings, spending too much time on email at the wrong times, or wasting time on phone calls. He details out his techniques to keep distracting people on the sidelines while he's living his life and doing the things that his heart desires. This book is an instruction manual for escaping the rat race. It's somewhat of a memoir, and a work in progress, of how he's doing it. He has examples throughout the book of how different people have applied his principles and changed their lives. He included a few people who had kids, which is great because a lot of people will use that excuse as a reason to not be able to do what he's doing. He's so open in the book revealing how he takes care of many personal matters in his life, even down to giving his travel checklist and his preferred brand of underwear, relevant for people who want to travel light. He's probably one of the world's most eligible bachelors. That is, if he's willing to let someone get any time on his calendar? I like him. I'd love to run into him in a coffee shop in a foreign country and have some time to just chat with him. He warns that some people really don't know what to do if they aren't working. This is a vital component of the book. He's going full-force at experiencing life in different cultures and getting involved in many different activities that give him new life experiences and perpetuate more new ways of thinking. It's important to know what to do when you are free. Otherwise you just have a vacuum of time which can feel like a boring retirement, where you're available, but all your friends and family are at work. I'm a writer, so I wasn't interested in setting up another company, but he also addresses intellectual property and its intrinsic value. Despite the fact that I don't want to set up a product-based business, many of his strategies are completely applicable and I've begun to apply the techniques right away. Yesterday, I choose to schedule a quick phone call instead of an in-person meeting when the in-person meeting would have been much more time-consuming, for example. He reminded me that I really need to guard my writing time. I certainly can't spin out books on 4 hours a week, but I could if I were willing to farm out the writing activity. He gave me a whole new appreciation for time and what I do each day of my life. If you're not satisfied with your work, or if you're searching for more ways to expand your income and free up your time, this book will be well worth your time. It's urgent for parents to put their kids in a different situation if they don't want them to get caught up in the same rat race that hasn't been fulfilling for them. If they change their own happiness level, it will certainly inspire their family and everyone they know as well. I love the title--The 4-Hour Workweek. At first it seems so absurd, like how could anyone do that? Yet after I read the book, I have tremendous respect this man who is the architect of his own freedom. And he shares his path for others who want to follow.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2016
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Sweetpea Waterlilly
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
Learn to live life now
I am a first time reviewer. I don't know Tim. I only know his book. That there are so many first time reviewers speaks volumes about the book. That said, here is my review: It took a kid to get the grown-ups to acknowledge what everyone knew to be true: the emperor was naked. Tim Ferriss is a kid relative to most other "self-help" authors but, like the young boy in the fable, his simple, uncluttered collection of "information we already know" more explicitly and successfully states the truth: our idea of achievement that requires a slavish obsession with working ourselves into the ground is a naked religion. Success is joy. Few books have the potential to inspire passion and fuel personal revolutions. The 4-Hour Workweek is one of them. This book speaks the common yearning to be liberated from the punishing work habits that our society has convinced us are compulsory for success. In simple, often humorous, terms, Tim Ferriss tells us how most of us lie to ourselves about why and how we work and shows us how we can become free. The modern age promised to bring freedom to humanity. Automation would liberate us from the drudgery of many common tasks, allowing us to complete our work with lightening speed, reserving the rest of our time for leisure. Like millionaires who can afford servants to do the drudgery, the common person would be able to forget the mundane and engage in the profound, to travel, to explore, and most importantly, to be free of worry. Unfortunately, we humans forgot about freedom and became slaves to our machines. Machines increased productivity and the availability of things. We reacted by convincing ourselves that we had to have them all to be satisfied and so became slaves to the jobs we believed necessary to obtain those things. More recently, email and cell phones, which were intended to increase productivity and communication, did so by making us instantly accessible and required us to be instantly responsive at any time of the day or night. Cable television and the Internet also increased communications and the flow of information, but also resulted in an information bombardment that left us catatonic, unable to disengage, yet unable to absorb it all. The result? At the end of our working lives - many times not by our own choice but because of downsizing and outsourcing -- exhausted and demoralized, we cannot enjoy the delayed gratification that has been our beacon of light, our holy grail, for so many years. Tim Ferris has the audacity to set the whole paradigm on fire in order to illuminate its true nature. Tim questions our assumptions about what progress is and what progress has done for us by highlighting the terrific costs we have imposed on ourselves. With gleeful delight Tim opens our eyes to the fact that we have become the cyborgs, less human rather than more. In a clear, step-by-step fashion, he presents elegant concepts and applies them to life in practical ways that have profound results. He reminds us that "the opposite of happiness is not sadness but boredom" and employs Pareto's 80/20 principle to demonstrate how we can identify those aspects of our lives that hold us back from being happy. He urges us to understand that life is not about the acquisition of things for later enjoyment, life is about happiness, fulfillment in the present, rather than in some un-promised future. Unfettered by useless jargon and overly academic presentation, Tim demonstrates how we can return to sanity and achieve happiness by finally becoming masters over the technology that was supposed to free us. He challenges us to give ourselves permission to quit the rat race and rejoin the human race. These ideas are not entirely new, but Tim's particular expression of them is like sparkling water to the parched souls of millions who now labor incessantly to achieve success yet yearn to quench their thirst for freedom. You don't have to be a millionaire to live a millionaire lifestyle, Tim says. Do you have a dream? Live it now.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2007
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Verified Purchase
Michael D. Cole
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 4
Amazing book, unnecessary expansion
Format: Hardcover
If you haven't read the original version - the 4-hour Workweek books is for many one of the most important books they've ever read, including me. For those who have read the original - the revised version is an improvement on the original, but not a big enough one to justify a second purchase if you've already read the book before. I've read this book and taken action on just a few of the principles and it has greatly improved my life, and you can easily do the same with the content from this book. Why? First, almost of the content in the book includes not only the general idea of doing something (like liberating yourself from an oppressive workplace), but also practical tips on how to actually do it. Even if only one section really relates to you that alone is enormously valuable and justifies the entire price. Second, the book espouses a 'lifestyle' philosophy which had many points that I had not really considered before reading the original edition. No, it isn't the idea of a 4 hour workweek. Tim Ferriss in makes it extremely clear that a 4 hour work week without anything to replace that fre time leaves you feeling empty inside. The point is to change your life or build systems that let you minimize the stuff you hate doing to only 4 hours a week. To free up your time up from doing things you hate he provides practical tips on: optimizing your work, setting up remote work agreements, automating it through designing systems, or outsourcing it to a Virtual Assistant. After that, he provides ideas of what to do once you've generated so much free time; because, most of us think we know what to do if we didn't work but it's only on an abstract level not a practical plan. Examples of replacement activities: traveling the world, creating 'charities' or other things that give back to the community, or simply setting up companies that earn money promoting the things you love. From a basic glance all of these ideas might sound trite or obvious, but the difference with the book is that he gives practical advice on how to actually make them all happen. I don't think I have yet read a better single book for changing your life into a fulfilling entrepreneurial lifestyle. If you were interested enough to even look at the reviews for the book just go buy the book already - at least something in the book will resonate enough to justify the purchase. As a side note: I notice a lot of recent reviews complaining about the author's writing style. Honestly, the book is easy to read and the content is amazing. Even if you completely hated the author's style (I think their complaints are hugely exaggerated) you can still learn plenty of things to adapt to your life. As for the honesty of his stories just check out his blog which has plenty of transparency and video proof of many of the things claimed.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2010
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Verified Purchase
Seth
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
Plus the title made it sound like it belonged on an infomercial and not in my ...
Format: Hardcover
I had seen the uber-orange cover of The 4 Hour Workweek by Tim Ferriss all over: Bookstores (duh!), backseats of cars, airplane terminals, frat houses and more. Yet despite its proliferation into the hands (and Kindles) of millions of people all over the world, and its catchy headline, I had yet to read it. In fact, I had no inclination to read it whatsoever. Quite frankly, I had no idea what it was about. Plus the title made it sound like it belonged on an infomercial and not in my book collection. Things changed when I started listening to the Tim Ferriss Show podcast just a few weeks ago. The podcast is fantastic and I haven’t been able to stop listening to it; I highly recommend it. From what I’ve noticed, if I enjoy reading someone’s articles or website, I generally enjoy their podcasts (the same holds true vice-versa). So when I saw that it was available for only $1.99 on Kindle I didn’t hesitate one bit. Can I really only work 4 hours? That’s what everyone wants to know. For the most part, no it is not feasible for most. In fact, Tim repeats in his podcasts and presumably other mediums that The 4 Hour Workweek is not to be taken literally. Rather, it drives the point home of what the book is really about: Optimizing your time, eliminating distractions, and finding passive streams of income to allow you to do minimal work while having maximum freedom. It’s a solid concept. In fact, there really is little basis for the traditional 9-5 schedule: How is it possible that all the people in the world need exactly 8 hours to accomplish their work? It isn’t. 9– 5 is arbitrary.” The idea behind this book is to essentially turn the idea of working hard on its head: Being busy is a form of laziness— lazy thinking and indiscriminate action. Being overwhelmed is often as unproductive as doing nothing, and is far more unpleasant. Being selective— doing less— is the path of the productive. Focus on the important few and ignore the rest.” Many books of this nature are simply filled with fluff, woo-woo, and other law of attraction platitudes, but The 4 Hour Workweek is absolutely filled to the brim with productivity tips. This makes the book worth the price of admission alone (that goes for the full price hardcover too!) There are a few concepts that he really stresses throughout the book and that will allow you to eliminate and optimize. The first of which is the 80/20 principle, also known as the Pareto Principle. This principle states that 80% of results (profit, happiness etc.) comes from 20% of output. Once Tim discovered this principle, he applied it to his nutritional supplement company so that he could focus on the select few clients that brought him the bulk of his income, and to eliminate the pesky customers who were nothing but trouble. Sure, it cost him some income, but it allowed him to reduce his stress exponentially and freed up a plethora of time. A second major principle is Parkinson’s law, which states: … that a task will swell in (perceived) importance and complexity in relation to the time allotted for its completion. It is the magic of the imminent deadline. If I give you 24 hours to complete a project, the time pressure forces you to focus on execution, and you have no choice but to do only the bare essentials. If I give you a week to complete the same task, it’s six days of making a mountain out of a molehill.” The best approach to Parkinson’s Law is to 1. Limit tasks to the important to shorten work time (80/ 20). 2. Shorten work time to limit tasks to the important (Parkinson’s Law). The best solution is to use both together: Identify the few critical tasks that contribute most to income and schedule them with very short and clear deadlines.” There are a plethora of other tidbits of wisdom throughout, such as: Check e-mail twice per day, once at 12: 00 noon or just prior to lunch, and again at 4: 00 P.M. At least three times per day at scheduled times [ask] the following question: Am I being productive or just active? More is not better, and stopping something is often 10 times better than finishing it. Getting Your Own Personal Assistant One of the most engaging and laughable topics in the book was the chapter on virtual assistants (VA). I say laughable because it’s actually incredibly feasible to have a 3rd world virtual assistant, and I couldn’t help myself from laughing at the idea of having a team of Indians heeding my every beck and call. Consider this: If you spend your time, worth $ 20-25 per hour, doing something that someone else will do for $ 10 per hour…” Makes sense. Plus there are other good reasons to consider getting a VA: Getting a remote personal assistant is a huge departure point and marks the moment that you learn how to give orders and be commander instead of the commanded. It is small-scale training wheels for the most critical of NR skills: remote management and communication.” The Original Internet Entrepeneur When I began to read Meditations by Marcus Aurelius, I noticed something: I had read this before. But it wasn’t because Aurelius was plagiarizing content 2000 years in the future, rather it was the inverse. I’ve noticed this phenomena with The 4 Hour Workweek in that much of the content seemed all too familiar with the Digital Nomad and lifestyle design communities and advice of today. But seeing as it was written originally in 2007, one could say it was the first of its kind. In fact, the proliferation of internet entrepreneurs are likely a result of this book. On that note, look where Tim Ferris is today. He’s not lounging on a beach in Guatemala making money off his supplements. Rather, he’s busting his ass in Silicon Valley helping startups turn into massive success stories. This is no fault of his; I just think many readers of this book and these internet entrepreneurs lose sight of this. They get caught in finding ‘passive income’ and settling for 1-3K a month; just enough to make do in a foreign country of their choice. This is what I wanted for so long, but now this doesn’t seem like enough. I’d much rather be doing what Tim is doing now as opposed to what he recommend in his book. Don’t Follow This Book Like the Gospel Again, the 4 Hour Workweek isn’t designed to be taken literally. This is a pattern throughout the book. In fact, much of the information regarding internet marketing and asking a boss for a remote work agreement is completely useless for me and may be for you. Yet, overall I was really impressed with the book. There was plenty of solid, actionable advice throughout. In fact, I’ve already marked this book down as one I will have to read again to internalize the concepts that stood out to me. http://masculinebooks.com/2015/05/26/the-4-hour-workweek-by-tim-ferriss/
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Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2015
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Verified Purchase
Marcus T Anthony, PhD
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
Life changing - if you want to change!
Format: Hardcover
Follow your bliss, and doors will open", Joseph Campbell famously stated. In "The Four Hour Work Week" Tim Ferriss details how he has followed his bliss, and the doors have certainly opened for him. Rather generously, he then tells us how to do the same. I found this book to have much that is very worthwhile. There is an enormous amount of information here, and the reader is free to pick and choose what he/she wants to take or leave. It has changed my life for the better. Some reviewers commented that they found the first half of T4HWW fascinating, but then lost interest. Assuming they are not the very time-deficit folks Ferris talks about, this is probably because the first portion of the book is entertainingly anecdotal, while towards the middle it becomes heavy with lists of information sources - web sites, organisations, reference books and so on. I have personally found this later section to be incredibly useful. That's because I have read and re-read the book with an intention to actually use it. I get the sense that a lot of the critics have never really tried to apply the book's philosophy and specific tips, and quickly returned to re-testing the keypads on their Blackberries. I found many of the listed web sites very useful. I have always wanted to feel the rush of being a colonial master, so I have hired book editors, programmers, virtual assistants, and translators from sites mentioned in the book, and all at very inexpensive prices. If I hadn't read the book, I would not have been aware of that these people even existed; or at the very least, would never have thought that I, with my one-man writing/publishing business, could ever use them. One other philosophical positive, Ferris is scathing of the modern culture of work for work's sake, information overload, and time wasting with gadgets. I fully concur. People are wasting their lives tapping away on mobile phones, Blackberries and lap-tops, just like I am now. There's a whole world out there waiting for us when we unplug from the matrix of the money and machines society. I personally loved the stories Ferris relates about his experience with this. Some people have expressed concerns about the ethical side of this book, and someone compared Timothy Ferriss to a snake oil salesman. I don't share this view, but I understand it. A clear statement of ethics earlier in the book would go a long way - what is right and wrong. In one section detailing how to become an expert, Ferriss says that the idea of expertise is largely a myth. All one really needs to do is read the three leading books in the field and come up with a new angle, then sell it. It may well be true that you could pass yourself off as an expert doing this, but I don't see it as being ethical, because it is a deliberate deception. If you have a brilliant idea, a fair enough; but you shouldn't be telling people what to do or what to buy if you don't have significant experience and knowledge of the subject (go into politics instead, where you will find lots of friends). To be fair though, Ferriss much later states that he will not work with unethical or dishonest people. Nonetheless, I do agree that it is often great - and very freeing - the break the rules; but the golden rule is never do harm to others. Towards the end of T4HWW, Ferris encourages the reader to act upon what really moves us, what makes us happy; and he asks us to be of service to the world. "Take time to find something that calls to you, not just the fist acceptable form of surrogate work" (p. 297), he writes. Once we have decided this (or "permitted" might be a better word), the task is to find out how to help others, the future generations, to do the same. He then implores us to develop a habit of charity. This very closely approximates my own approach to life, as I've outlined in my books. One thing I would suggest though, is developing a set of specific tools to enable you to really follow your inner guidance system. I call it listening to the "Sage". Ferris doesn't address this issue specifically. I suspect T4HWW will work best for western audiences. Besides being a lot fatter and generally more annoying than just about everyone else, studies tend to show that westerners are more individualistic and free-thinking than other cultures. In comparison, Asian cultures have a low tolerance for ambiguity and change (Singapore has the lowest capacity in the world, Hong Kong, where I live, is fifth last - so don't come here trying to change anyone's mind). A central point Ferriss makes is that people develop life and work habits which drain their souls of vitality, spontaneity, and the adventurous spirit of the child (I am in complete agreement). To shift those habits one has to begin to jettison the conformist, conservative and restrictive culture of one's society. It is unfair to criticise Timothy Ferriss for not always having followed the formula outlined in T4HWW. He's a relatively young man in his early 30's who is finding his way through the world with active experimentation, by being adventurous. He is following his Bliss. So give the poor New Rich kid a break. I say, "Well done, Tim. Keep up the good work!" - and it is how to do good (fun, vitlising) work that he is teaching us. And as Ferriss points out on his web site, the title should not be taken too literally. The author doesn't work four hours a week. He merely does what he loves, when he wants to do it, where he wants to do it. That's what I call smart. That's living your Bliss. I give Timothy Ferriss' "The 4 Hour World Week" a 5-star rating. It is potentially life-changing. This is not a book you read just once for inspiration. It is hands on, and chock full of practical tips and know-how. T4HWW will work best for those who have an entrepreneurial and freedom-loving spirit, those who like to think outside the box, and preferably outside the country. It is highly recommended. Marcus T. Anthony, author of "Sage of Synchronicity" and "Integrated Intelligence."
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Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2010

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