The Corporate World Worships Busyness, Not Intelligence
Let's conduct a thought experiment. Two employees. Same role. Same salary. Employee A: Works 10 hours. Takes 2 hours of focused, deep work to finish a task that should take 4. Spends the remaining time learning, thinking, or—god forbid—resting. Delivers high-quality output. Leaves at 6 PM. Employee B: Works 12 hours. Spends 6 hours on the same task because they're distracted, inefficient, or just bad at prioritization. Spams "quick updates" every 30 minutes. Replies to emails at 2 AM. Looks exhausted in every meeting. Leaves at 9 PM. Who gets promoted? If you said Employee A, you haven't been paying attention. The corporate world worships busyness, not intelligence. It rewards visible suffering, not efficient output. It celebrates the appearance of effort while punishing the reality of competence. Welcome to the cult of performative exhaustion. The altar is your calendar. The offering is your sanity. --- The 2 AM Email: A Love Letter to Dysfunction You've seen...