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!
It was a classic topic at lunch when I was doing my dissertation and people often cited this study but it's been a few years now. I found a study that shows that organization and determination were the first factors for pregnant women to succeed
'Discipline and organization. Many participants (n=18) described a high level of internal discipline and organization that helped them to manage the competing demands of pregnancy/parenting and doctoral work. Participants described carefully organizing their responsibilities and their time in order to be able to complete all required doctoral tasks. For many participants, this organization began during—or even before—their pregnancies. In planning pregnancies, participants looked ahead at program milestones to ensure that a pregnancy would not delay their progression.'
Determination 'In fact, many participants described an increased determination after they had a child, which motivated them to reorganize their lives or give up leisure time to complete the necessary tasks' [...] 'For participants like this one, persisting in the program became not just an individual achievement, but something they were doing for their children as well' [...] Negative experiences, such as the stress and loss that accompany infertility and/or pregnancy loss, also had the potential to motivate participants to persist
In Mirick, Rebecca & Wladkowski, Stephanie. (2020). Making it Work: Pregnant and Parenting Doctoral Students’ Attributions of Persistence. Advances in Social Work. 19, p. 358.