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PRODUCTIVITY PORN: 10 Reasons Why People Are Way Too Obsessed With Getting Things Done

Why is it there are so many people writing articles about how to increase/maximize/enhance/optimize/improve/streamline productivity, and so many more people consuming them? Is the path to salvation truly found at the end of the productivity rainbow - if only we could 80/20 our way there?

If all we had to do with our lives was be more productive, why do so many people not feel happy and fulfilled?

In his recent book "Four Thousand Weeks" (my review can be found here: https://notepd.com/idea/11-valuable-concepts-from-four-thousand-weeks-by-oliver-burkeman-bf76c), Oliver Burkeman suggests that for all of the knowledge, technology, and hacks at our disposal to speed up our lives and get more done, we are none the better for it.

Sure it's great to have someone deliver groceries to my front door, to be able to send a message to someone on the other end of the globe with the press of a button, and to have access to an endless array of amusing cat videos on the device in my pocket, but am I content with my life? Did I do anything meaningful with my family today? Who am I serving by living a perfectly optimized, productive life?

What is the point of it all?

    1. Society makes us feel inadequate unless we are doing, doing, doing all the time.

    This message is common in the United States. "Idle hands are the devil's workshop." This indoctrination starts innocently enough when children are five-years-old (five!) and are enrolled in kindergarten. Here they learn the best way to stack blocks, tie shoes, and understand basic math tables.

    Soon, though, as in one year later when they reach the ripe old age of six, children begin the first of twelve long years of stacking one hourly class after another, day after day, getting information that will be of little import to their lives crammed down their throats. Who schedules their days by studying one topic for exactly one hour, as if that was adequate to learn any topic deeply, and then switch to another topic for exactly one hour, and continue that haphazard approach to learning all day? Oh, adults do that - they do it all the time by scheduling meetings hour after hour all day long.

    All in the name of efficient learning, so we can maximize how much children learn and therefore become productive members of society.

    Except, for the majority of children, it doesn't work.

    2. People who feel inadequate (bosses) push other people who feel inadequate (employees) to do more.

    One reason we are trying to constantly produce more is that bosses who think they're going to lose their jobs if they don't do more push their employees to do more, and then those employees feel like they're going to lose their jobs if they don't do more, now, faster, better.

    There's nothing wrong with growth and improvement, but it is not healthy to pursue it from a state of insecurity.

    3. We are convinced we will achieve enlightenment if we could only reach the tantalizing yet always just-out-of-reach INBOX ZERO.

    There's some weird cultural obsession with reaching inbox zero. It's almost as if some people treat it as a mystical experience, a higher plane of existence where we achieve productivity Nirvana. Just search for #inboxzero on Twitter and see what some people are saying.

    Sure, I don't like having a lot of emails in my inbox either. Since you're probably not going to respond to them all anyhow, either forget about them and let them go or just delete them all. If there is something truly important in there, you would have seen it and responded. Or, if not, the sender will get a hold of you somehow.

    4. Being "productive" (which could mean getting something valuable done, or it could mean just doing busy work) releases dopamine, and we are hooked to it like crack.

    Oh, that sweet, sweet hit of dopamine. It hits us every time we get something done, which makes us want to do more, and more, and more. But like any drug, it can be addicting.

    Everything in moderation.

    5. The news media always makes us think the economy is about to implode and we're all going to be eating cat food on the streets.

    When was the last time the media told us the economy is flying high and everyone is doing well? Yeah, I don't remember that either. If we feel insecure about our economic positions, we are going to work harder and try to produce more to prove our value and keep our jobs.

    6. Life responsibilities always have us on a slow simmer - just enough to keep us hustling every minute of the day, but not enough for us to boil over.

    It seems like there is always something that must be done. Pick up the clothes at the dry cleaners. Drop the kids off at practice. Complete that report for the boss. While some things may not be avoided, and in fact are good to do, it helps to remember that we decided to carry all the burdens of our lives on our shoulders. Like a heavy backpack, at any time, we can take them off and put them down.

    7. The advent of "hustle culture."

    I don't know where this concept originated, but you see it everywhere. Young people on Instagram and YouTube HUSTLING. It's standard now to work two jobs and have a side hustle (or three). Do you need to do it to make ends meet? Okay. Understandable. Otherwise, do you know why you're doing all this work? What's the end game?

    8. We all have ADHD now.

    The internet, social media, YouTube, and smartphones, have hijacked our attention. We were never designed to accommodate the onslaught to our senses that we experience all day, every day, from these sources. Dings and reminders and likes and comments and banners and vibrations.

    Yet it all makes us feel like we're getting so much done. In reality, most of it is noise and does not get us closer to anything we truly value in life. What it has done has made it difficult for us to focus on one thing at a time; one thing that might actually be worth our energy and attention.

    9. Secretly we all know we're going to die and we're super anxious about it.

    Therefore we think we need to maximize every minute of our lives to make it worthwhile. But, is the definition of "maximize" to be doing something each and every minute of the day?

    10. For all the tricks, hacks, and secrets, many people miss the things that actually allow us to get meaningful work done.

    1. Understand what is most important.
    2. Work hard on it.
    3. Rest.
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