AndreyBelyakov on Nostr: HOW MANY HOURS IS IT BEST TO WORK — FROM SOMEONE WHO TRIED 4-HOUR WORKWEEK, 4-HOUR ...
HOW MANY HOURS IS IT BEST TO WORK — FROM SOMEONE WHO TRIED 4-HOUR WORKWEEK, 4-HOUR WORKDAY AND NOT WORKING AT ALL
I have worked all day every day.
I have worked one day a week for couple of years (influenced by «4-hour workweek» by Tim Ferris that first came out then and was very trendy).
I have worked 2-4 hours a day, which seems trendy today.
I have not worked at all for 6 years.
Today based on this varied experience I think it's best to work 8 hours and more most days.
Reasons:
1) 8 hours of work per day gats your brain in gear to produce at least 1-2 hours of top work a day.
I think this is the way to get to genius level or at least as close to it as you can.
Today I'm convinced that most geniuses have the same slow brains we all inherited from primates, but are able to consistently «overclock» theirs (some, like Jobs and Francis Krick were open about using psychedelics for this purpose, but all definitely used long uninterrupted work).
2) This regiment of work is important for brain not to lose its cognitive functions (which sadly I observed both in myself in the 6 years I didn't work and in other people I knew who lived similar lives — even in a very young age).
#productivity #timemanagement #time-management
I have worked all day every day.
I have worked one day a week for couple of years (influenced by «4-hour workweek» by Tim Ferris that first came out then and was very trendy).
I have worked 2-4 hours a day, which seems trendy today.
I have not worked at all for 6 years.
Today based on this varied experience I think it's best to work 8 hours and more most days.
Reasons:
1) 8 hours of work per day gats your brain in gear to produce at least 1-2 hours of top work a day.
I think this is the way to get to genius level or at least as close to it as you can.
Today I'm convinced that most geniuses have the same slow brains we all inherited from primates, but are able to consistently «overclock» theirs (some, like Jobs and Francis Krick were open about using psychedelics for this purpose, but all definitely used long uninterrupted work).
2) This regiment of work is important for brain not to lose its cognitive functions (which sadly I observed both in myself in the 6 years I didn't work and in other people I knew who lived similar lives — even in a very young age).
#productivity #timemanagement #time-management