However that would only be possible because I've been working and saving since I was 15 years old.
Ideally I'd like to be both. But when one gets on the "ambitious" treadmill, capitalism wants one to work 24/7/365. Your competition is showing off how they worked until 4am, worked through the holidays, launched products on Sunday, and slept in the office, as "dedication". That culture makes me unhappy because I lose my physical health and mental health doing that. I'm happy and do my best work when I can go home, cook creative dinners, enjoy company of my partner, and enjoy the sunrises and sunsets in the mountains on the weekends.
I've worked at companies that did stuff like that, and they failed. It's not sustainable and doesn't lead to success. And yes, capitalism took care of correcting that, because competitors who didn't do those things are still around.
I'm perfectly okay with technological progress happening 50% slower than it is. I'm fine with launching an ambitious, groundbreaking technical project next year instead of this year. I'd be happy launching something that ambitious while enjoying every step along the way and having fun.
Capitalism is the one that isn't okay with that approach.
Love it!
Since I was 20 I've grinded away at my career, side hustles, etc... It made me happy. But at a certain point I got far enough ahead I felt complete. I needed a boring phase.
I now wake up, have breakfast with my family, go to work, come home, play with my kids, watch a show, and go to bed. This is a day I would have scoffed at 10 years ago. But it now makes me happy. I don't think it would make me happy if I hadn't went for something the last 15.
And it might not make me happy forever, but it's perfect for me right now.
That said, doing little or nothing is quite relaxing, especially on rainy days.
I agree with the general premise, just not the details like the above.
Long before trends, fashions, tech entered my life, I became acutely aware of my brevity in this (likely one and only) life. That has been pressure enough, coming from within, to make the most of it.
I guess I have not yet been able to shake that. There are things, like fishing for example, that I suspect I might enjoy. But I see feel the time for fishing is when I am too old to do other things.
FWIW, I am retired now and spend my days working on one project or another (or several).
Perhaps I am not enjoying life as much as I could be … if I could just shake off the anxiety that the sand is running through the hourglass.
My cats sure seem to not care a wit.
Plus, not everyone has the privilege to put their feet up and sip green tea on a balcony to look at trees.
Beautiful writing, nonetheless. You do you, friend.
As a counter-perspective, not saying you have, but me forcing myself to do things that are essentially the opposite of that (move to the other side of the world without any plan) basically changed my life for the better. It felt forced, a bit like betraying myself, and as an introvert, completely outside my comfort zone. Yet it was probably the best decision I've made in my life so far.
But again, it's OK to wanting to focus on sustainable, non-forced things too.
That janitor dude choose to not expose himself or maybe learn not to get reeled into the marketing of exciting things.
Maybe it’s me but the only reason you can fall in love with the life of a Japanese toilet cleaner is because either the Japanese society allows someone in that profession to be at peace or the movie leaves out significant parts of life that impact your inner peace. Coming from a place where worrying about arranging even a small amount of money in a short amount of time for a medical emergency could ruin your peace for years, I think all of what’s mentioned in the article is possible only after your basic needs are taken care of.
That’s a luxury reserved for the rich.
But before "FOMO" used to be religious, more like "FOGTH", or fear of going to hell.
So people were mostly happy living simple, sweet lives. Spend time with family. Raise your children. Have a simple job. Just don't go to hell, so go to church, pray, don't sin. Everything will be great, as long as you don't go to hell.
Probably in like the 60s did consumerism become the mainstream religion and it's been taking over since. Now you *must* make more money to: buy a house, take a fancy vacation, live a luxurious retirement, etc.
The cringe "hustle culture" of today is because for some people, it's their spiritual fulfillment. It is their religion. Their main focal point of existence is to buy bigger, buy better. It's almost taboo to consider an early retirement, "omg, I'd get so bored! I'd go crazy!"
How dare you not follow my religion of selling B2B SaaS? You are not a go-getter, and I am. Did I mention I also have a podcast?
This is a quote from Alex Proyas (director of Dark City, irobot, the crow etc), he has long observed that humans are biologically under-adapted for a modernity of silicon-fueld complexity
https://www.starburstmagazine.com/features/alex-proyas-dark-...
Aside - For some reason I can't stand the writing style but also strongly feel that this opinion is completely wrong and this intense dissonance is a very very bizarre feeling.
Thanks for sharing :)
There’s a quiet cruelty in how modern economies make stability feel like a luxury. Owning a home, having savings, or even time to be bored used to be normal milestones, now they are privileges. Until the basics are within reach again, the “boring” life will remain a fantasy for many who’d give anything for that kind of peace.
Most of us here work in tech and make six figures, but not everyone has that luxury.
Ehh, I don't know. Didn't people for vast majority of our history worried about what (if anything) they would eat not even next month, but next week?
My point isn’t that we’re worse off than pre-industrial farmers. It is that progress was supposed to free us from that precarity, not repackage it with Wi-Fi and subscriptions.
Today we can access, easily and cheaply (often free), almost every song ever recorded, every book ever written, every movie ever filmed, every video game ever made. You can write and reach thousands. You can film and reach millions. Twenty years ago, that was a millionaire’s life.
It’s the need for more and more and more that alienates us. Do you really need that shiny new car? Do you really need to take a vacation? Do you really need that promotion?
For some, work (and the status that comes with it) became their identity. Take it away and there’s nothing left. Others keep constant noise and stress around just to avoid hearing themselves think.
What if you chose a peaceful life?
meanwhile, OP's entire substack post denouncing hustle culture is about plugging his viral tweet and his ebook
When I was in my 20s and early 30s I read that and scoffed because I was hustling, building my career and company. But over the last few years, I realize all that hustling just leads to an empty shell of a life. I just want a simple life where I spend a lot of time with my wife, son and family.
> “let us take on the world while we’re young and able, and bring us back together when the day is done” - the highwomen
As I have gotten older there are an increasing amount of things I'm not interested in, don't think about, or don't care about anymore.
Music. The latest hits have no appeal to me. It's just noise. I caught myself thinking, "What is this crap these days.". This 100% reminded me of my parents that no longer had interest in listening to the radio, which I thought was really weird and "uncool" as a kid.
Work Topics. I would be in the middle of every e-mail or work topic with great interest. Now, I just file certain e-mails away with never reading them. For the first time in my life I'm that person that can be reminded, "Didn't you read the e-mail that was sent out".
There are other examples, but you get the idea. As you get older certain things just fade away and only certain things occupy your mind. It may not mirror this article, but it's similar. What you enjoy or matters most tends to take focus as you get older, whether you realize it or now.
aclark•2h ago