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The ONE Thing

520. Addicted to Busyness? The Science, the Symptoms, and the Cure

The ONE Thing

NOVA Media

Entrepreneurship, Business, Careers

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 25 August 2025

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

There’s a reason rest feels like stress when you’re hooked on hustle. Jay unpacks why so many high achievers get trapped in a cycle of motion over progress—how the Zeigarnik effect and our dopamine bias for fast wins pull us toward low-value tasks—and what it costs us in value, time, and morale. He then gets tactical: how to own the problem, say “no” more often, and swap performative work for priorities you can point to at day’s end. Jay shares practical moves that break the cycle: “clear the decks” before deep work, use the focusing question as a sobriety check (“Is this my ONE Thing?”), and start your day with goals before phones so you can say “not now” with confidence. He also highlights the power of building buffer time, translating big goals into weekly milestones, and adding accountability so priorities stick. For the long game, Jay emphasizes weekly 4-1-1 planning, end-of-day reflection, a standing hour of “thinking time,” and quarterly reviews. Even small pauses—a half-Friday off each month—can retrain your system away from busyness and back toward meaningful results. Challenge of the Week: Do a 48‑hour busyness fast. For two consecutive workdays, keep a visible note open and check in a few times a day: “Am I in the busyness trap or on my ONE Thing?” Don’t judge—just observe. Do a short reflection each evening on where you drifted and what helped you refocus. *** To learn more, and for the complete show notes, visit: the1thing.com/pods. We talk about: How the Zeigarnik effect and dopamine loops fuel shallow work Why “goals before phones” makes it easier to say no and protect deep work The weekly 4‑1‑1, thinking time, and simple buffers that sustain focus Links & Tools from This Episode: Read Deep Work by Cal Newport Harvard Business Review: Beware a Culture of Busyness Read The Progress Principle by Teresa Amabile Read The Road Less Stupid by Keith Cunningham Read The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry by John Mark Comer Free Resources Want to be a guest or share feedback? Email podcast@the1thing.com or send us an audio note at Speakpipe.com/the1thing. Produced by NOVA

Transcript

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0:00.0

There's a drug that's perfectly legal. It's socially acceptable. People may be even

0:05.0

favorite at times, but it's most likely undoing a lot of your long-term success. And that drug is

0:10.3

called busyness. And a lot of very successful people that we meet that we run into and the one

0:15.4

thing business are highly addicted to it. They've come into a cycle of busyness that they don't know

0:20.6

how to break. So we're

0:22.2

revisiting business today, and we're going to do a little bit of an intervention. And to kick it off,

0:27.8

I'm going to tell you a story, a historical little bit, about Albert Einstein. In 1921, he won the

0:35.0

Nobel Prize. And he was supposed to go to Stockholm to receive the prize and do the

0:40.5

award ceremony, but he had already agreed at that time to do a lecture tour in Japan. And he opted to skip

0:47.8

the award ceremony and go to Japan. So he was staying at the Tokyo's Imperial Hotel, and a courier arrived to drop off a package. And it's

0:57.8

unclear from the notes of history, whether he didn't have a tent or maybe the courier wouldn't

1:03.5

accept it. But Einstein wanted to give him something. So he wrote a note, kind of a life,

1:10.6

truth, an aphorism in life in German, and they told

1:14.0

the courier, hold on to this, it might be valuable someday. And here's what the note said. It was his

1:19.3

theory of happiness. A common modest life brings more happiness than the pursuit of success

1:25.8

combined with constant restlessness. Now, here's the thing. That note did

1:31.7

turn out to be very valuable. The courier held on to it. He passed it on in his family. And a few years

1:37.6

back, it sold at auction in Jerusalem for $1.56 million. Just as a collectible, his handwritten note on happiness from Albert Einstein,

1:47.5

$1.56 million. So, yeah, he was right. It turned out to be very valuable. And that career

1:53.5

and his family hopefully did very well. That's wonderful. But here's the thing. The advice

1:59.3

itself is infinitely more valuable. And we have to ask our

2:02.6

questions. Like, why can't we take it? Why can't we choose success with also not going into this

...

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