The Science Help Show

More Hours Won't Save You

46 min · 15 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio More Hours Won't Save You

Descripción

More hours won't save you. In fact, they're often the reason you're stuck. This episode starts with a familiar problem—trying to move something meaningful forward while smaller, urgent tasks keep taking over—and then reframes it in two ways that change everything. First, it's not a time problem, it's an energy problem: the brain resists high-effort work, which is why "Do It for Five" works when motivation doesn't. Second, getting more done isn't about pushing longer—it's about protecting your energy so your output stays high. When you don't burn yourself out, your work is sharper, faster, and actually moves things forward. From there, it gets practical: using the Eisenhower Matrix to separate noise from what matters, and the Zeigarnik effect to actually shut work down at the end of the day. The shift is counterintuitive—trade quantity for quality. Work less, get more done.

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14 episodios

episode More Hours Won't Save You artwork

More Hours Won't Save You

More hours won't save you. In fact, they're often the reason you're stuck. This episode starts with a familiar problem—trying to move something meaningful forward while smaller, urgent tasks keep taking over—and then reframes it in two ways that change everything. First, it's not a time problem, it's an energy problem: the brain resists high-effort work, which is why "Do It for Five" works when motivation doesn't. Second, getting more done isn't about pushing longer—it's about protecting your energy so your output stays high. When you don't burn yourself out, your work is sharper, faster, and actually moves things forward. From there, it gets practical: using the Eisenhower Matrix to separate noise from what matters, and the Zeigarnik effect to actually shut work down at the end of the day. The shift is counterintuitive—trade quantity for quality. Work less, get more done.

15 de abr de 202646 min
episode Emotional Intelligence Isn't a Trait. It's a Trainable Skill artwork

Emotional Intelligence Isn't a Trait. It's a Trainable Skill

Some people think emotional intelligence is something you either have or you don't. Science says otherwise. In today's episode of the Science-Help Show, we dig into the research behind emotional intelligence—where it came from, how scientists began studying emotions seriously, and why the ability to understand and regulate emotions is one of the most trainable skills in human psychology. We explore how emotions shape perception, why our brains get stuck in emotional loops, and the practical tools that help people step out of them. If you've ever wondered why your emotions sometimes seem to run the show—or how to work with them instead of against them—this conversation brings the science into the messy reality of everyday life.

4 de mar de 202652 min