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!
I became significantly harder-working in ~June 2018, age 22-23. This was not the case beforehand and has persisted for years afterwards. Some highly-overlapping-so-hard-to-disentangle things that happened around the time:
All of these improved quite sharply around the time boundary.
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,
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