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15 Courier Deliveries or Courier Services for One Month from Boston Proper Delivery (Up to 50% Off)

Valid only within 4 miles of zip code 02114. Registration required. Merchant's standard cancellation policy applies (any fees not to exceed voucher price). Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. Valid only for option purchased. All goods or services must be used by the same person. Additional charge of $1/mile outside of service area. 8% surcharge for grocery deliveries over $50.

Non-profit, eco-friendly courier service uses bikes or electric cars to make pickups and deliveries around Boston

Choose Between Two Options

  • $25 for courier services for 15 deliveries ($50 value); limit of two addresses on file with unlimited deliveries per day
  • $50 for one month of courier services ($100 value); limit of three addresses on file with up to two deliveries per day

Groupon does not cover the cost of goods purchased during each service.

Monochronic Time: The Western Way of Doing Things

A personal assistant can help you keep track of your schedule, though some would argue there's no need to keep track at all. Check out Groupon's lowdown on a different way to look at time.

"Time is money." Credited to Founding Father Benjamin Franklin, this idiom reflects the relatively unique way that Americans think of time. In many Western cultures—particularly the United States and Northern Europe—time is considered tangible, a commodity measured in the completion of tasks or by the hands of a clock. This supposition is often taken for granted by people who live and die by schedules, appointments, and deadlines—in short, those who operate in monochronic time.

More than a few linear years after Dr. Franklin's aphorism, anthropologist Edward T. Hall coined the term "monochronic" in his 1959 work The Silent Language, which explores the ways in which different cultures view the passage of time. According to Hall, monochronic cultures view time as a linear progression, in which the completion of a singular task—attending an important meeting, say, or eating the most hard-boiled eggs in one hour—is held in the highest regard. Conversely, polychronic cultures—found in parts of the Pacific islands, the Middle East, and Latin America—pay less attention to finite time restrictions, preferring to juggle numerous tasks at once and focus on maintaining interpersonal relationships rather than sticking to a set schedule.

While Hall's seminal work was written through the lens of cultural anthropology, today his concepts are most often invoked in the world of international relations, where companies are always conducting business across temporal lines. To a monochrome, time is inflexible; to a polychrome, it's fluid. Acknowledging and respecting these cultural differences can help people avoid misunderstandings about punctuality or why the hotel televisions don't always air Frasier exactly at 8 o'clock.

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