Most people are working incredibly hard at the wrong timescales. They chase quarterly targets, short relationships, 30-day challenges, and quick financial wins - then wonder why their life does not feel like it is adding up. Play the Long Games is a practical guide to long term thinking across career, marriage, health, and money, built around a single, coherent life strategy map. Cyrus Ildren shows how to design 30-year horizons, translate them into 10-year arcs, and focus each year through simple yearly themes. You will learn how to shape your career planning around skills that compound, create cashflow engines without turning life into a spreadsheet, and agree capital allocation and risk management rules that support both security and experimentation. In partnership, you will discover how to run couple councils, design marriage rituals, and make decisions as if you really will live with each other for decades. Rather than offering hacks or heroic challenges, this book emphasises modest but consistent health habits, stop-doing lists, and renewal seasons that keep you in the game. It helps you align work, money, relationships, and wellbeing so they quietly reinforce one another instead of pulling apart. Finally, it guides you through legacy planning and service, so your long games extend beyond your own comfort to shape the people and places you care about. Play the Long Games is for thoughtful professionals, couples, and parents who are tired of sprints and ready to build a life that compounds.
Play the Long Games
SKU: 9789376557561
$35.99 Regular Price
$24.98Sale Price
- Cyrus Ildren writes for people who want their lives to add up. Over many years of working alongside ambitious professionals, young families, and those in mid-life transition, Cyrus has watched too many smart people win sprints while losing their long games. His work focuses on helping others design lives where career, marriage, health, and money reinforce rather than compete with each other. Cyrus’s thinking is shaped by a deep interest in how ordinary people build durable lives across generations. Growing up in a household where grandparents told stories of rebuilding after upheaval, he absorbed the idea that decades, not days, are the real unit of meaning. That historical awareness colours his approach to modern questions of work, partnership, and contribution. In workshops, writing, and quiet conversations, Cyrus returns to a few simple convictions: alignment matters more than intensity, compounding beats drama, and good maps beat heroic willpower. Play the Long Games distils those convictions into a clear, humane guide for readers who want to make fewer frantic moves and more considered, coordinated ones over the decades ahead.


















