Summary:
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The grind for a year-long goal ended with quitting, revealing the messy reality of hustle culture.
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Sleeping brought back creativity and improved relationships, challenging the productivity mindset.
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Taking a break from hustle culture improved productivity, relationships, and overall well-being, proving less work meant better work.
The objective in the grind was a year-long goal. Wake up at 5 a.m., crack it, streamline it, pin motivational quotes, and just take everything and run on caffeine and insanity. What then, when you simply quit? When they woke up in 30 days with no hustle, no grinding, no LinkedIn inspiration posts, it’s the truth, and the reality is, it is a rather messy, funny, a bit uncomfortable, and the reality itself is… Well, worth every productive hour is worth nothing.
Guilt Arrived First
Day one was not so much an experiment in wellness as it was a case of making the mistake of calling in sick when you feel fine. It was a guilt that was instant, dramatic, and utterly exhausting. Hustle culture had clearly been rent-free in my head all this time and was not going to go without a fight.
Sleep Changed Everything
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It turns out that it is not a lazy eight hours of sleep but only a crime within the hustle culture. After the 5 a.m. alarm tyranny was over, actual sleep occurred. Mood improved. Patience returned. It turns out that the productivity secret that all people overlooked was merely to lie horizontally and do nothing whatsoever for eight hours straight.
Creativity Returned
No one informs you that the best ideas do not come to you in a color-coded planning session. They come in the shower, slowly walking, and gazing at the ceiling, creating nothing really particular. Providing the brain with real breathing space proved to be invaluable, even down to all the productivity apps.
Relationships Improved
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The hustle culture had apparently transformed all dinners into half-attended meetings. One month of true attendance disclosed that all the people surrounding me had been graciously putting up with an absent-minded and time-obsessed housemate all these years. Listening, not putting the phone down? Wildly revolutionary. Highly recommend. Should have tried it sooner.
Identity Crisis Hit
It is very disturbing to get constant productivity out of your personality. And no sooner had he asked it than the actual question struck with a twitch, wait, who are thou? It also happens that a lot of self-worth has been outsourced to a to-do list. The list on which, alas, it was not hugged back, and inquired how one was faring.
Body Responded
It seemed that the body had been submitting complaints about noise in hustle culture over the years, and no one was opening the inbox. Headaches that occurred because of stress faded. The shoulders returned to their non-earning positions. Digestion improved. However, it turns out that the body is a very honest reviewer, and it has been giving a 1-star rating internally for a long time.
Money Fears Surfaced
The deeply fun activity of the second week was lying on a couch with your brain playing the scenarios of financial catastrophe, low-level screams in full volume. The culture of hustle had done an outstanding service of telling the world that rest is the same thing as irrelevant. A majority of those fears, when examined, were rather ornate fiction with very high production value.
Boredom Was Useful
Actual boredom came sometime at day twelve, and it was exactly uncomfortable, as running into a person you ghosted at a grocery store. However, by being able to sit with it without reaching out to the phone, something surprising became apparent: just how many desires, forgotten pursuits, and goals had long been buried under the calendar notifications embarrassingly long.
Output Actually Improved
This is where it will jerk off all of the hustle culture evangelists, that less work meant better work. Less time, complete attention, and no feeling of exhaustion leading to typing errors. The best productivity refill of the whole thirty days proved to be nothing more than is taking a break, like a person who values himself. Infuriating and wonderful at the same time.
No Going Back
Thirty days of not grinding me did not make me a lazy person. It made a more relaxed, more humorous, more sleep-deprived, much less manic version of the same individual. Ambition survived. The cruel suffering was superfluous. It turns out that it is much better to enjoy success without being completely exhausted to eat it.