Next Door Neuro
Why do so many of us feel like we're constantly falling behind? Why does slowing down feel uncomfortable? And why do we often judge ourselves for needing rest, recovery, or space? In this episode of Next Door Neuro - Lab Notes, I explore an idea that has been sticking with me since my conversation with productivity coach Emily Guerra: Many of us are treating ourselves like machines. And increasingly, modern life is training us to do exactly that. More hours. More output. More optimization. More efficiency. More productivity. But humans aren't factories, and brains don't work like industrial machines. Our attention fluctuates, our motivation shifts, our energy changes, our creativity ebbs and flows... and recovery following a period of output matters. In this episode, I explore: • Why modern culture increasingly equates productivity with value • How hustle culture shapes our expectations of ourselves • Why humans evolved in rhythms of effort and recovery • How productivity slowly becomes identity • Why many of us expect things from ourselves we'd never expect from another person • And why thriving may require reconnecting with our biological rhythms Importantly, this isn't about lowering your standards... It's about recognizing that sustainable performance requires recovery. Because we are biological organisms, not industrial machines. — Timestamps: 01:30 – Modern life rewards output 02:00 – Brains aren't factories 02:35 – Humans function in rhythms 03:23 – Productivity becomes identity 03:48 – Expectations we'd never place on others 04:20 – We are biological organisms
23 episodios
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