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Too tired to do everything?

How to live better without burning out


Scott young

Wake up at 5am. Read a book a week. Exercise every day—but make sure it’s high-intensity or it doesn’t
count. Journal. Meditate. Volunteer.

Living well sounds exhausting. Maybe it’s just easier to flop down and watch Netflix? Productivity
guilt happens when you feel overwhelmed by all the things you know you “should” be doing. You don’t
do them, but you still have that nagging feeling like you’re wasting time. If you feel that guilt, I am partly
to blame. I write a lot about how to live better, and sometimes all those suggestions can start to feel more
like burdens than helpful advice.

If living well sounds exhausting, what should you do about it? Should you just ignore all that advice as
posturing from overachievers? Or should you beat yourself up for not reaching some hypothetical ideal?

Exposing the Hidden Contradictions of Life Advice

Part of the problem is that suggestions are almost always given on their own. So you can read about why
exercise, reading, meditating or gratitude journaling are good on their own, but rarely about how they
trade off against each other. After all, you only have a certain number of hours in the day. If you’ve got a
busy job, studies or family, at some point you’re simply going to run out of time.

There will always be trade-offs. If you’re meditating for an hour every day, that might cut into your gym
routine. Or social life. Or reading habits. Or something else…

In practice, the fewer things you’re trying to stick to at the same time, the less there is room for conflict.
If you’re only worrying about exercise, it’s probably not so hard to stick with that and simply reduce the
amount of time you waste on obviously trivial things. However, when you start trying to add fifty other
suggestions for living well you’ll find they start to conflict with each other.

Prioritizing these different ideas is under-discussed, perhaps because it’s messy, complicated and
different people disagree. It’s easy to say “Exercise more!” It’s more controversial to say, “Exercise more
and read fewer books,” yet the first does hint at the second, if only implicitly.

What If You Have Time, But You’re Just Too Tired to Do Everything?

Even if your timetable isn’t so compressed that it’s literally impossible to fit some added activity in,
sometimes you’re just too tired to do all the stuff you should. As in, you know you could read a book and
learn something enlightening, but randomly scrolling Twitter feels like less work. Is it simply the case
that your energy is limited, and if you put in effort in one area of your life, you’re necessarily sucking it
away from another area?

This is a common view, but the research shows it’s actually a lot more complicated. Roy Baumeister
helped develop the view of ego depletion, which basically means exactly this idea: exerting willpower is
hard, it depends on a finite store, and when that store is depleted you succumb to temptations more easily.

Except ego depletion hasn’t stood up as well as a scientific concept after more rigorous replications.
Indeed, there’s research that shows that the way you think of your own willpower affects its depletion. If
you believe that you’re “energized” by doing hard things, you tend not to get depleted after exerting
willpower. If there really were a physical store of energy, then your beliefs about it shouldn’t affect it. Yet
they do.
More research is still needed to determine exactly what biological mechanisms go into feeling fatigued,
especially when the fatigue is purely mental. However, it’s likely to be a lot more nuanced than simply
burning up energy from a fuel reserve.

How to Design a Better Life (Guilt Free)

First, realize that you actually cannot do everything you should. You can’t even do everything
you want to do. That’s okay, that’s just the normal constraint of living in a world where time isn’t infinite.

Therefore, it’s totally okay to acknowledge that there’s a trade-off between different pursuits. You might
want to meditate an hour every day, but recognize that this will cut into your gym habit. Or you might
decide that waking up early is going to cut into your social life.

I won’t decide which you ought to prioritize—that’s for you to choose. I’m not even consistent with how
I make this choice. At some points in my life, I’ve prioritized my health and fitness, other times my social
life, reading or some other activity. While, in theory, there’s enough time for everything, in practice there
are almost always trade-offs.

Second, make a distinction between a lack of inertia and persistent exhaustion from an
activity being more hassle than help. If you push yourself to the gym, but feel good after you went,
that’s good. On the other hand, if you constantly feel exhausted by everything, you might be pushing
yourself towards burn out.

Finally, live well for your own sake, not because somebody told you that you should. Beating yourself up
because you don’t reach someone else’s idea of perfection is the best way to make yourself miserable.

Answer the following questions in your own words.

1. Does living well sound exhausting to you too? How do you cope with it?
2. What is the most important, but less talked about solution to “live a better life”?
3. Explain Roy Baumeister’s view of ego depletion.
4. After reading this article, can you suggest two ways in which you can design yourself a “better”
guilt free life?
5. What genre does this article belong to? What were the key indicators that helped you recognize
the genre?

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