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Work like a panther
17 points by mattredler on Dec 2, 2021 | hide | past | favorite | 13 comments
There’s a pattern among history’s most successful & influential people: Most of them worked fewer hours than the average American.

Darwin, Hemingway, Beethoven: None of them worked more than 4 or 5 hours in a day.

Yet they produced lifetimes of great work. Here’s how:

Hemingway would write in the morning until lunch. That was it.

Darwin would place sections of focused deep work in between long walks and reading.

Beethoven would write music for a few hours in the morning. Then he’d enjoy his day.

You’ll see this pattern over and over.

There’s a common thread among these 3 and many others:

Each of them had the freedom to organize their days around productivity.

They would work, hard, when they worked best.

By doing so, they could maximize both their productivity and their leisure time.

They understood that good leisure is intentional.

It’s not Netflix for 8 hours––it’s pursuing passions, exercising, side projects, or spending time with friends.

By enjoying life, you’ll do better work.

In other words, a balanced lifestyle isn’t lazy: It’s more productive.

Here’s a model you can use:

Treat your mental energy each day like an hourglass.

Many scientists and creatives think you have about 3 to 6 hours of truly focused work before you run out.

When you turn that hourglass over, make the most of every minute.

I’m writing this because, until recently, most people haven’t had the freedom to organize their lives this way.

But remote work gives you the agency to organize your day like Hemingway & Darwin & Beethoven.




I'll tell this to the cleaning lady who works for a living 12 hours a day. Her 12-hour schedule is the only thing holding her back from truly fulfilling her dreams. I'll tell her 4 or 5 hours is really all she needs to do. When her hungry children come begging for food and her landlord comes asking for the rent, she can tell them that she's just maximizing her productivity and her leisure time, and that they should do the same if they want to live a truly productive and meaningful life.


I take your point and agree that OP is writing from a place of privilege. His post is addressed to knowledge workers and people who could theoretically afford this type of existence. I'm sure just as Darwin was leisurely walking around, there were people working 12 hour days to ensure that he could do so.


Right so your solution for the cleaning lady is for her to work 24 hours? Or double the hour rate? If the second, many of them would choose to work 8 or less hours to improve life quality.


> There’s a pattern among history’s most successful & influential people: Most of them worked fewer hours than the average American.

They weren't successful and influential because of that.

They were able to do that because of relative privilege, whether earned by their success or of birth or chance (that likely was key to enabling their succeess/influence) or, most often, a mixture of the two.


> Each of them had the freedom to organize their days around productivity.

I think the point (I'm probably wrong) is that these kind of people did not have to "work for others" and had 24h a day every day for themselves. I would love to have 24h/day for myself alone and work in a very productive way around 4h in the morning on stuff of my own. As long as I need to work for others around 8h/day (because I need to pay the bills), then I cannot be productive.

Edit: I don't care about being productive while working for others.


> I don't care about being productive while working for others.

Curious, what do you care about or what priorities keep you focused during an average workday?


When working for others I care about:

1. Knowing my craft (so, I got my degree and I "study"/learn stuff every week on my free time. I like it, so I don't feel it like "work time")

2. Doing always my best. So, if I need to find a solution to a problem, I'll consider the tradeoffs and requirements and come up with something that I will not regret pushing to production with all the knowledge I have at the moment. This allows me to sleep good at nights.

Both points could be summarized as "being honest with myself and with others".

From Wikipedia:

> Productivity is the efficiency of production of goods or services expressed by some measure.

I don't really care about measures.


Yeah, I'm learning to schedule my deep work when my energy is the highest and the house is the quietest. Remote work is great esp when I lived alone, but now I'm finally my afternoon time blocks get interrupted more & more.

Curious, Matt how do you enjoy life beside binge watching Netflix? What are your pursuits. I've been at this founder journey so long, that most of my pursuits fall into work-related or comatose in from of the tv.


To OP:

Why didn’t you make this a blog post and build your personal brand? Why freely give us this topic?


Maybe he doesn’t even have a blog? Maybe he just wanted to get the idea out there, nothing wrong with that.


Whenever anyone mentions anything interesting in a conversation with you, do you also ask them why they didn't monetize it instead?

Or is it some kind of sarcasm I'm not getting?


All the guys you mentioned are individual contributors though. I agree 100% with your model in an IC research job or grad school. For something like starting a company or even growing as a leader, the formula doesn't hold.


The question is, did they have to learn modern front-end development and deep-dive into the JS ecosystem.




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