Busy Is a Lie
You don’t have a time problem. You have a truth problem. “Busy” has become a socially acceptable excuse for lack of progress. It sounds productive. It feels responsible. It signals importance. But in reality, it’s often a mask for poor systems, weak prioritization, and avoidance of meaningful work. If you’re working all day and still feel behind, this will be uncomfortable, but necessary. 1. “Busy” Is Not a Metric, It’s a Smokescreen Let’s get precise: B usyness measures activity, not outcomes . Answering emails, attending meetings, checking Slack, “researching", these are not results. They are inputs . And most people overload their day with low-impact inputs to avoid confronting the harder question: What actually moves the needle? ❌ High performers don’t ask, “How full is my day?” ✅ They ask, “What did I finish that matters?” There’s a structural issue here: modern work environments reward visible activity over real output. If you look engaged, you’re perceived as valuable—ev...