Nostr-only post follows. One thing I've been reflecting on this last week is that many of the people who changed the world worked deep hours, and remarkably few of them. I did some research and found 7 examples that might change how you think about your day, and the belief that grinding long hours is the best way to success image Charles Darwin worked two 90-minute blocks each morning, then a single hour later in the day. Between sessions: naps and long walks On this schedule he wrote 19 books (including On the Origin of Species) 4 hours a day, and he changed biology forever image Roald Dahl wrote from 10am-noon, then 4pm-6pm. 7 days a week. No exceptions He spent six months on a single short story. His words: "Writing is not inspiration. It's keeping your bottom on the seat" On 4 hours/day, he became one of the most beloved authors who ever lived image Henri Poincare worked 10am-noon, then 5pm-7pm He solved problems mentally in breaks, then committed them to paper A psychologist who studied his routine in 1910, found working longer achieved nothing extra 4 hrs/day, and he reshaped Topology, planetary physics and chaos theory Literatureimage Hemingway started at first light and stopped before noon. 500 to 1,000 words, standing up, pencil on paper He famously stopped mid-sentence so he'd have momentum the next morning ~5 hours a day and a Nobel Prize in Literature image Novelist Anthony Trollope paid a servant to wake him at 5:30am. He wrote from 5am to 8am with a watch in front of him - 250 words every 15 minutes. Then he went to his day job (at the Post Office) 3 hours a day, 47 novels over 35 years - all before breakfast ! image Tchaikovsky composed at his desk for about 4.5 hours split across morning and evening But he also took a daily two-hour walk, timed to the minute, composing in his head as he walked In ~4.5 hours at the desk he captured what the walk created The rest was letting the mind work image · "But what about Musk, he works 80-100 hr weeks?" Look closer He schedules his day in 5-minute blocks 90% of his time is meetings and design reviews. That's executive coordination (and he's brilliant at it) - a different kind of work from the deep creation these others did image "But what about Picasso, Balzac and others who worked big hours?" Picasso painted for long stretches. But he alternated intense work with long social meals and downtime within the day Balzac wrote 16 hours a day fuelled by industrial quantities of coffee (he also died at 51) I've seen this firsthand. One founder I coached was working 80-hour weeks, on the point of burnout. I shared 4 productivity strategies, got him to cut back to 50-hr weeks and go home to his family NPS scores, Q12 ratings, RPU all improved. The company exited 2 years later The pattern across all of these: short duration, consistent deep focus, real rest between sessions They protected the hours, protected the recovery, and they didn't confuse hours with output The lesson: Perhaps working more isn't the secret? Perhaps working deeper is?

Replies (8)

Okay I guess I got triggered a bit at seeing his face haha. You still give him a lot more credit here than he deserves though, but nevermind, my apologies for focusing on the less important stuff.
Get some sense of proportion, man! Calling Musk a scammer is high comedy. The man makes great products to improve your quality of life, just like Ford or Edison did. But those pantyweights only made ONE line of good products... Elon's doing it in many different industries simultaneously. Rockets, Cars, Batteries, Internet, AI, Robotics, Neural Implants, & Tunnel boring so far... Revolutionizing each sector as he enters it. A thousand years from now they'll be studying Musk in business & history textbooks both. - And no entrepreneur between now and then will come close to doing as much to change the quality of life for humanity. But sure, he's just scamming... lol