Work Is Never Finished (So Stop Waiting for It to Be)
Focus on This
Michael Hyatt
4.5 • 657 Ratings
🗓️ 30 March 2026
⏱️ 46 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Summary
Work is never really finished—so if you're waiting for the to-do list to run dry before you close your laptop, you'll be there all night. In this episode, Joel and Marissa tackle one of the most common struggles inside the Full Focus community: how to actually end your workday. From the always-on culture of remote work to the dopamine hit of checking dashboards after hours, the pulls are real. But so is your agency. With the right ritual and a few intentional shifts, you can stop letting work bleed into the rest of your life.
Key Takeaways
- Work Doesn't Have a Natural Finish Line. Unlike a project with a clear deliverable, the workday as a whole never truly ends—there's always another email, another task, another initiative. That means you have to decide when done is, rather than waiting for it to arrive on its own.
- Remote Work Has Erased the Built-In Boundary. The commute home used to signal the transition. Now, work lives in your pocket 24/7, and every time you open your laptop (even for personal reasons), it's staring you in the face. Awareness of this is the first step toward protecting your evenings.
- Overwork Is Often a Symptom, Not the Problem. If you can't seem to stop before 7pm, the real issue is probably something upstream—unclear priorities, an inability to delegate, or projects that need to be eliminated altogether. Ask why you're overworking, not just how to stop.
- Schedule the Shutdown. Block the last 30 minutes of your workday on your calendar. Review your Daily Big Three, check email and Slack, capture any open loops in your planner, and set up tomorrow in advance. If your calendar is booked to the final minute, you'll never actually shut down on time.
- Your Body Doesn't Clock Out When You Do. Physiological arousal outlasts the workday. Even when the work hours are technically over, your nervous system is still running. You need a deliberate transition—a walk, a change of clothes, dimmed lights, a warm drink—to signal to your brain and body that the day is done.
Watch on YouTube at: Â https://youtu.be/O6Kiahpv9nY
This episode was produced by Sarah Vorhees Wendel of VW Sound
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Do you ever feel like this? Work is never really actually finished. There's always one more email, |
| 0:07.6 | one more thing to wrap up, that task that just keeps lingering that you can just not get to in |
| 0:13.5 | your day for love or for money. So if you're waiting until work is done to close your laptop, |
| 0:19.9 | unfortunately, you're probably going to be |
| 0:22.1 | waiting forever. Well, today, we're talking about how to actually end your work day. |
| 0:32.8 | Welcome to Focus on This, the Most Productive Podcast on the Internet. I'm Marissa Hyatt. |
| 0:38.5 | And I'm Joel Miller. |
| 0:39.7 | This is where we remind you of something you already know. |
| 0:43.2 | It's not about getting more things done. |
| 0:45.7 | It's about getting the right things done. |
| 0:48.2 | Both at work and in life. |
| 0:49.9 | And today we're talking about something most of us struggle with. |
| 0:54.3 | As Marissa mentioned, we're talking about something most of us struggle with. As Marissa mentioned, we're talking about actually ending the work day. |
| 1:00.8 | You know, I feel like one of the things that I hear almost on a weekly basis inside of our double win coaching community is people coming to our calls asking the question, |
| 1:13.6 | how do I stop work? |
| 1:15.3 | Like turn it off. |
| 1:16.5 | How do I turn it off? |
| 1:17.7 | Right. |
| 1:18.1 | Because it feels like unless you have a child coming in and screaming at you, a spouse |
| 1:24.1 | coming in and knocking on your door, or I don't know, the lights literally going on in |
| 1:29.3 | your office or the electricity or something like that, it does feel like this can become never |
| 1:34.5 | ending. And we've heard this many times. We use it in our marketing, the idea of the never |
... |
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