Why You’re Dead By 5 PM (And How to Reclaim Your Evenings)
You’re not physically tired. You’re sitting all day. But by 5 PM, you’re completely drained with zero willpower left. That’s not laziness—that’s biology punishi
Frameworks for resilience, leadership psychology, and the discipline it takes to operate at scale without burning out.
You’re not physically tired. You’re sitting all day. But by 5 PM, you’re completely drained with zero willpower left. That’s not laziness—that’s biology punishi
Revenue is up. Clients are happy. So why do you feel more exhausted now than when you were broke? Because success without systems is just a prettier prison.
You know you need to leave. The job drains you. The commute is killing you. The work feels meaningless. But the salary is good. The title is impressive. And eve
Every week you make big plans. Wake up earlier. Work out. Eat better. You feel motivated for two days, maybe three. Then everything slides. You call yourself la
You spent years delivering excellent work, assuming it would speak for itself. Then you watched louder, less capable people get promoted ahead of you. The painf
Your friend asks what you’ve been up to lately. You realize the honest answer is nothing. Work, home, exhausted, repeat. You’ve stopped making plans, abandoned
At 31, making six figures in a role that looks impressive on paper, you realize you’ve built a prison with a great salary. Every year you stay makes escape hard
Seven years at the same company. One catastrophically poor decision. Fired for misconduct, no reference, three kids at home. How does someone rebuild from this?
You keep running into them: people in management who’ve sacrificed family, health, personal growth, and free time for their careers. They’re successful by every
Eighteen months unemployed. Selling plasma to survive. The shame isn’t just about money—it’s about looking in the mirror and not recognizing who’s looking back.