520. Addicted to Busyness? The Science, the Symptoms, and the Cure
The ONE Thing
NOVA Media
4.8 • 1.1K Ratings
🗓️ 25 August 2025
⏱️ 34 minutes
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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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