But at the same time, his days don’t seem very busy to us. The times we would classify as “work” consist of three 90-minute periods. If he had been a professor in a university today, he would have been denied tenure. If he’d been working in a company, he would have been fired within a week.
Today I worked from around 6am – 9am. Took my three kids to the park for a bit. Had some lunch. Back in the office at around 11 and then I was in and out till 2pm when my wife had to go out and I hung with the kids that didn’t go with them.
Is that a lazy schedule?
When I read these articles about Darwin or…whomever from the past that made big contributions and yet didn’t work all that much I wonder:
- did they have “money” in some form so that they’re work didn’t need to generate income thus they were free to do what they wanted?
- did they buy out of consumerism in some fashion?
Finally, like most others I wonder how on earth I can emulate this schedule of working a reasonable amount of time and having leisure time? I’ve got it better than most, but I’m still working on it in many ways.
Of course, I have reviewed the author’s book Rest. Yes you should read it.
2 responses to “The “lazy” people we have lauded in the past”
I think most of us do what we can to valence our days. In the end I think it is about our choices and personal priorities.
Best regards
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