Prioritizing Work
I recently read a blog post that concluded with:
When Iâm on my deathbed, I wonât look back at my life and wish I had worked harder. Iâll look back and wish I spent more time with the people I loved.
Setting aside that some people donât have the economic breathing room to make this kind of tradeoff, what jumps out at me is the implication that youâre not working on something important that youâll endorse in retrospect. I donât think the author is envisioning directly valuable work (reducing risk from international conflict, pandemics, or AI-supported totalitarianism; improving humanityâs treatment of animals; fighting global poverty) or the undervalued less direct approach of earning money and donating it to enable others to work on pressing problems.
Definitely spend time with your friends, family, and those you love. Donât work to the exclusion of everything else that matters in your life. But if your tens of thousands of hours at work arenât something you expect to look back on with pride, consider whether thereâs something else you could be doing professionally that you could feel good about.
Strongly agree with this well-articulated point.
Sometimes friends ask me why I work so hard, and I donât know how to get them to understand that itâs because I believe that it matters â and the fact that they donât believe that about their work is maybe a sign they should do something else.
A Forum post can be short. What a great ratio of punch per word.
@Julia_Wiseđž gets credit for this! My draft had two paragraphs for âSetting aside that some people donât have the economic breathing room to make this kind of tradeoffâ.
Rob Wiblin interviewed nuclearâwar plannerâturnedâwhistleâblower DanielâŻEllsberg, five years before he died. Hereâs a quote from the interview:
I like this post a lot. I often use âregret minimisationâ as a frame when making important decisions, which feels quite similar to âdoing things you would endorse on your deathbedâ.
I didnât realise this, but apparently âregret minimisationâ was popularised by Jeff Bezos, and this is literally how Jeff describes it. I guess itâs a very natural concept and this name is pretty descriptive.
https://ââwww.fastcompany.com/ââ90662406/ââjeff-bezos-uses-a-simple-framework-for-making-big-decisions-heres-how-it-works
Daniel Pinks The Power of Regret also dives into this. The book might only be a less punchy way of saying what this post says. But maybe also a good motivational book for someone headed towards regret.
And the webpage for gathering peoples regrets is a fun ideaâalthough it doesnt say anything about whether they have put all this data to use.
https://ââworldregretsurvey.com
You can even take this further and question why the person on their deathbed doesnât feel proud of the work they chose to do. Maybe they feel ashamed of their actual preferences and donât need to. Or maybe they arenât taking to heart the tradeoff in interests between the experiencing self and the remembering self.
Thanks for this â itâs a thoughtful reminder that âworkâ and âmeaningâ donât have to be mutually exclusive. As an occupational health epidemiologist, I often think about how much of our lives are spent at work, and how both the content of that work and the conditions we work under shape well-being, identity, and long-term health. I agree that time with loved ones matters enormously â but I also think thereâs something life-affirming about doing work that contributes to systemic change, whether thatâs protecting peopleâs health today or reducing the risk of catastrophic harms to humanity in the future.
I read this on the morning of a sunny national holiday that I spent indoors, typing away as usual, and I came back to it three times, it really resonates. I might even translate it in French, crediting you (if thatâs alright) and share it with acquaintances (or simply paraphrase it) next time they seem confused or worried by me choosing to make work my main focus in life. I really like the last sentence in particular.
Hey @JoAđž , I was considering having a translation (maybe adapted to our cultural context) on EA Franceâs website, if @Jeff Kaufman đž is giving us his blessing :)
Sure!
@Jeff Kaufman đž I would like to do the same for EA NorwayâI take it thats fine?
Sure!
Thanks for writing this. Iâve told other people this in the past.
Donât work to the exclusion of everything else that matters in your life. Apt!
why is this downvoted??
âł...some people donât have the economic breathing room to make this kind of tradeoff..â Yup, the joy of doing something you love means living for something bigger than self, and something that impacts humanity, however small, is a natural high. Literally and figuratively, some of us donât have the luxuryâthe economic breathing room to make this kind of tradeoff. The future of work impacted me very early before AIâs fangs.