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Hey friends, Chase here
Let’s talk about hustle.
Not the old-school definition of hustle — as in working hard, caring deeply, staying committed, and doing the reps. That kind of effort still matters. It always will.
I’m talking about what hustle has become.
The kind of hustle that glorifies exhaustion. The kind that mistakes motion for progress. The kind that tells you if you’re not burning the candle at both ends, you’re not serious enough about your dreams.
And I want to say this clearly:
You don’t need more hustle. You need more capacity.
Because without focus, vision, rest, and self-awareness, working harder doesn’t necessarily move you closer to the life you want. It can just leave you burnt out, disconnected, and unable to do the work that actually matters.
For years, I bought into the myth.
I slept five or six hours a night. I worked ridiculous days — sometimes up to 20 hours. I thought that was what commitment looked like. I thought grinding myself down was the price of building something meaningful.
And then I hit a point where my body and mind gave me a wake-up call.
On a vacation in Hawaii, with nothing on my schedule for the first time in what felt like forever, I slept 14 hours a night for nearly a week. Not because I was lazy. Not because I lacked ambition. Because I was empty.
And once I finally rested, everything changed.
I was nicer. More creative. More self-aware. More connected to what I actually wanted and needed. I felt more alive.
That experience changed the way I think about work, creativity, ambition, success, and fulfillment.
This episode is about that shift.
It’s about why rest is not the enemy of ambition. It’s about why capacity beats constant motion. It’s about why the most fulfilled people I know aren’t the ones who grind themselves into dust — they’re the ones who learn how to stay in the game.
🎧 Listen to the Episode Right Here:
Here’s the thing most high performers eventually learn:
You can’t build a meaningful life on depletion.
You might be able to push through for a season. You might be able to sprint through a launch, a deadline, a hard chapter, a creative breakthrough. There are absolutely moments when the work requires intensity.
But intensity is not the same as sustainability.
And if your only strategy is to keep pushing harder, eventually the cost shows up. In your body. In your relationships. In your creativity. In your sense of meaning. In your ability to actually enjoy the thing you’ve worked so hard to build.
That’s why the question isn’t, “How do I hustle more?”
The better question is:
How do I build the capacity to do great work for a long time?
Capacity includes energy. It includes sleep. It includes focus. It includes emotional bandwidth. It includes self-awareness. It includes the ability to know when to push, when to pause, when to recover, and when to come back stronger.
This is not about doing less with your life.
It’s about doing the right things with more presence, more power, and more longevity.
The Core Idea
Rest is not a reward for finishing the work. Rest is part of how the work gets done.
That idea can feel uncomfortable if you were raised on a steady diet of “work harder,” “sleep when you’re dead,” and “no days off.”
But here’s what I’ve seen again and again — in my own life, in the lives of people I’ve worked with, hired, interviewed, coached, and admired:
The most fulfilled people are not striving toward some impossible standard for the sake of the standard.
They work hard. But they also recover hard.
They have intention around their effort. They know what matters. They know when their body needs sleep, when their mind needs space, and when their spirit needs something other than another task on the list.
They understand that life is long.
And if life is long, then the goal is not to flame out in one heroic burst of productivity.
The goal is to stay in the game.
You have to learn to rest rather than quit.
That’s the real shift.
Because quitting often comes after we ignore the signals for too long. We push through fatigue. We override our own needs. We treat burnout like proof that we care. Then one day, we’re not just tired — we’re resentful, creatively numb, and disconnected from the very thing we once loved.
Rest interrupts that cycle.
Sleep interrupts that cycle.
Self-awareness interrupts that cycle.
And when you build those things into your life before everything breaks, you create a different kind of ambition. One that is not weaker. One that is not softer. One that is actually more powerful because it can last.
What You’ll Hear in This Episode
This is a short micro show, but it cuts right into a pattern so many creative people, entrepreneurs, and high achievers struggle with.
Here are the ideas worth listening for:
- Why hustle has become confused with progress — and why movement without focus can leave you burned out instead of fulfilled
- The wake-up call that changed my relationship with sleep after years of working extreme hours and running on too little rest
- Why recovery can catapult your creativity instead of slowing you down
- The difference between dumb hustle and smart hustle — and why working hard still matters when it’s done with awareness
- Why “life is long” changes everything about how we pursue success, creativity, and fulfillment
- How to replace balance with harmony by learning to move with the seasons of your life
- Why short-term urgency and long-term patience might be the new pattern for sustainable success
Timecodes (So You Can Jump to What You Need)
If you’re not listening straight through, here are a few landmarks to help you find the part that speaks to where you are right now:
- 01:50 – Why the old idea of hustle needs an update
- 02:35 – The wake-up call: working 20-hour days and finally crashing into real rest
- 03:31 – What changed after sleeping 14 hours a night for nearly a week
- 04:46 – How sleep became a catapult for creativity, awareness, and aliveness
- 05:12 – The secret hack to a long, productive, creative life
- 06:28 – Learning to rest rather than quit
- 08:16 – Why life is long, and why chasing one flash of success is the wrong game
- 08:45 – Working smarter, not just harder
- 09:35 – The difference between dumb hustle and smart hustle
- 10:26 – “Sometimes you’re not blocked. You’re just empty.”
- 11:31 – Why harmony beats balance
- 12:37 – Short-term urgency, long-term patience
Read This If You’re Burned Out
If you’re tired right now, I want you to consider something:
Maybe you don’t need more discipline. Maybe you need more restoration.
That doesn’t mean discipline is irrelevant. It doesn’t mean hard work doesn’t matter. It doesn’t mean you should abandon your standards or stop caring about the quality of what you create.
It means your system might be running at a deficit.
And when you’re running at a deficit, everything gets distorted.
Your work feels heavier than it is. Your relationships feel more difficult. Your creativity feels harder to access. Your patience shrinks. Your sense of possibility gets smaller. You start making decisions from survival mode instead of vision.
That’s not a character flaw.
That’s biology.
That’s capacity.
And capacity can be rebuilt.
Sometimes the most strategic thing you can do is sleep. Take a walk. Eat real food. Put the phone down. Get outside. Stop trying to squeeze one more thing out of a system that is asking to recover.
Again, this is not an argument against ambition.
This is an argument for ambition that doesn’t destroy the person carrying it.
The Trap of Success at All Costs
There’s an old model of success that says you have one shot.
One opportunity. One window. One big break. One viral moment. One chance to prove yourself.
And when you believe that, panic becomes the operating system.
You chase. You grip. You overwork. You try to force every project to become the thing that saves you. You look at every opportunity through the lens of scarcity.
But that world is fading.
The one-hit wonder model is not the goal. The flash-in-the-pan version of success is not the goal. Achieving something at all costs and then clinging to it with your fingernails is not the goal.
The new pattern is different.
It’s about building many things that matter over time.
It’s about pursuing curiosity. It’s about understanding the seasons of your life. It’s about knowing when to go hard and when to recover. It’s about becoming wiser about your own needs and wants.
The goal is not to burn bright once.
The goal is to keep becoming.
Questions to Ask Yourself
If you want to turn this episode into action, take five minutes and sit with these:
- Where am I mistaking motion for progress?
- What am I calling “hustle” that might actually be avoidance, fear, or lack of focus?
- Am I giving my body, mind, and spirit what they need to stay in the game?
- Where am I depleted and pretending I’m just undisciplined?
- What would smart hustle look like in this season of my life?
- What is one thing I could stop doing that would immediately create more capacity?
- What is one recovery habit I could treat as seriously as my work?
- Am I chasing short-term validation at the expense of long-term fulfillment?
A Simple Practice for Building Capacity
Here’s something you can do immediately — especially if you’ve been grinding, overworking, or feeling like you’re always behind.
For the next seven days, don’t start by asking, “How can I do more?”
Start by asking:
“What would give me more capacity today?”
Then choose one small action.
- Go to bed 30 minutes earlier. Not perfectly. Just earlier than usual.
- Take a walk without your phone. Let your mind breathe.
- Do one focused block of work instead of bouncing between ten tasks.
- Eat something that actually supports your energy.
- Cancel or postpone one nonessential commitment that is draining you.
- Spend ten minutes reflecting on what you need instead of what everyone else expects.
The point isn’t to overhaul your entire life overnight.
The point is to start listening.
Because when you listen to your own system, you start to understand the difference between laziness and depletion. Between resistance and misalignment. Between real effort and frantic motion.
And that awareness becomes leverage.
Capacity Is the New Competitive Advantage
We talk a lot about skills.
Technical skills. Creative skills. Business skills. Communication skills. Leadership skills.
All of those matter.
But the skill of self-awareness might be one of the most important skills of all.
Can you tell when you’re empty? Can you tell when you’re avoiding? Can you tell when you need to push? Can you tell when you need to rest? Can you tell what season of life you’re actually in?
That kind of awareness changes everything.
Because the goal is not perfect balance.
Balance implies everything gets an equal slice all the time. Twenty percent here. Twenty percent there. Career, family, health, relationships, personal growth — all perfectly divided.
But life doesn’t work that way.
Life works in waves.
Sometimes you need to over-index on family. Sometimes work needs a surge of attention. Sometimes your health has to become the priority. Sometimes your inner life needs more space.
That’s harmony.
Harmony is not rigid equality. It’s integration. It’s knowing how to move between the parts of your life without abandoning yourself in the process.
And when you learn that, you stop treating rest as a weakness.
You start seeing it as part of the architecture of a meaningful life.
The New Pattern
The old pattern said: work endlessly, achieve at all costs, rest later.
The new pattern says: work hard, recover deeply, stay awake to what matters.
The old pattern said: success first, fulfillment maybe.
The new pattern says: success and fulfillment have to be built together.
The old pattern said: push until you break.
The new pattern says: build the capacity to continue.
That is the shift.
And I know it can feel risky to say this out loud, especially in a culture that still celebrates exhaustion. But I’ve seen it too many times to ignore.
The most successful and fulfilled people eventually come to this realization:
You have more time than you think.
But don’t let that become an excuse for passivity.
Let it become permission to build differently.
Move with urgency in the short term. Practice patience in the long term. Take care of the vessel that carries the vision. Learn to work hard without grinding yourself into the ground.
Because the goal is not just to achieve.
The goal is to stay alive to the work, to your relationships, to your creativity, and to yourself while you do it.
Until next time: work hard, recover harder, and remember — you don’t need more hustle. You need more capacity.










