I'd be curious to hear stories of people who have successfully become more hard-working, especially if they started out as not particularly hard-working. Types of things I can imagine playing a role or know have played a role for some people:
- Switching roles to something that is conducive to hard work, e.g. a fast-paced environment with lots of concrete tasks and fires to put out.
- Medication, e.g. ADHD medication
- Internal work, e.g. specific types of therapy, meditation, self-help reading, or other types of reflection.
- Productivity hacks, e.g. more accountability, putting specific systems in place
- Motivational events, arguments, or life periods, e.g. working a normal corporate jobs where long hours are expected
- Switching work environment to something that is conducive to hard work, e.g. always working in an office with others who hold you accountable
This curiosity was triggered by realising that I know of very few people that have become substantially harder-working over their late adolescence/adult life. I also noticed that the few people that I know successfully and seemingly permanently increased their mental health/work satisfaction always were hard-working even when they were unhappy (unless they were in the middle of burn-out or similar).
People becoming more hard-working seems really useful but I haven't seen much in terms of evidence that it's feasible or effective methods. If there are books or studies on this topic, those would also be welcome. Thank you!
Some possible answers that haven't seemed to have had large effects on hard-workingness for me:
(Several of these had important impacts on my mood.)
Thanks for sharing. I think the above are examples of things people often don't think of when trying new ways to be more productive. Instead, the default is trying out new productivity tools and systems (which might also help!). Environment and being in a flux period can totally change your behaviour in the long term; sometimes, it's the only way to create lasting change.
Thanks for sharing. I took a look at your CV:
"Top of cohort; first-class honours; thesis prize; highest ever mark in Applied Econometrics."
Sounds like you were incredibly hard working before you made this move!
Out of curiosity, what were the "novel work behaviours" specifically?
I think you've revealed that my thinking was muddled in the earlier response! The sequence of events from my POV is:
- Before university, I did extremely little academic work. (Can expand; I really think it's outlier-low.)
- For my first 2.5 out of 3 years at university I did as close to zero work as was feasible. (For example, I attended very few lectures.)
- If I sat down to try to work on this (without an impending exam in <2 weeks time), it felt like I was physically unable to work.
- During this period, I spent lots of time on side projects/nascent businesses, and internships related to these things. I am describing this situation as 'not hard working' above because I think about 'hard working' as more or less meaning 'hard working [on traditional academic or professional pursuits, not part-time, barely paid sports analytics side-projects].' I would describe hard work on side projects as part of me being 'intense' or something -- if you want to describe it as 'hard working', fair enough.
- At the 2-2.5 year mark, I had been very fortunate to have obtained some strong grades. I don't think this is false modesty -- I just just had a lot of variance (on both sides). One of my friends' parent
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