WSJ: ‘Work-Life Balance’ Will Keep You Mediocre (guess writer's generation))
| ruby stag film marketing idea | 08/19/25 | | Grizzly scourge upon the earth queen of the night | 08/19/25 | | ruby stag film marketing idea | 08/19/25 | | Laughsome Jet Lay Roommate | 08/19/25 | | at-the-ready henna fat ankles | 08/19/25 | | chrome aphrodisiac point | 08/19/25 | | racy boiling water parlour | 08/19/25 | | garnet heady whorehouse | 08/19/25 | | Territorial ungodly space | 08/19/25 | | Bateful Institution | 08/19/25 | | Supple Bbw | 08/19/25 | | at-the-ready henna fat ankles | 08/19/25 | | glassy boistinker gaping | 08/19/25 | | Glittery piazza community account | 08/19/25 | | vivacious lemon property son of senegal | 08/19/25 | | Insecure Brass Shrine | 08/19/25 | | Electric Jap | 08/19/25 | | cruel-hearted address | 08/19/25 | | topaz jet-lagged halford ape | 08/19/25 | | Glittery piazza community account | 08/19/25 | | Ebony heaven | 08/19/25 | | Glittery piazza community account | 08/19/25 | | Ebony heaven | 08/19/25 | | Glittery piazza community account | 08/19/25 | | at-the-ready henna fat ankles | 08/19/25 | | chrome aphrodisiac point | 08/19/25 | | charcoal rigor | 08/19/25 | | painfully honest wonderful trump supporter | 08/19/25 | | twinkling meetinghouse | 08/19/25 | | Rose personal credit line | 08/19/25 | | racy boiling water parlour | 08/19/25 | | chrome aphrodisiac point | 08/19/25 | | at-the-ready henna fat ankles | 08/19/25 | | chrome aphrodisiac point | 08/19/25 | | Ebony heaven | 08/19/25 | | chrome aphrodisiac point | 08/19/25 | | racy boiling water parlour | 08/19/25 | | Glittery piazza community account | 08/19/25 | | chrome aphrodisiac point | 08/19/25 | | Exciting bonkers keepsake machete | 08/19/25 | | Razzle-dazzle anal brunch | 08/19/25 | | Mischievous Excitant Stage | 08/19/25 | | Rose personal credit line | 08/19/25 | | Up-to-no-good ocher becky | 08/19/25 | | Khaki naked garrison giraffe | 08/19/25 | | Peach university | 08/19/25 | | Mischievous Excitant Stage | 08/19/25 | | magical pale sandwich | 08/19/25 | | idiotic ultramarine place of business office | 08/19/25 | | Low-t charismatic foreskin | 08/19/25 | | Rose personal credit line | 08/19/25 | | Exciting bonkers keepsake machete | 08/19/25 | | Rose personal credit line | 08/19/25 | | Exciting bonkers keepsake machete | 08/19/25 | | at-the-ready henna fat ankles | 08/19/25 | | Exciting bonkers keepsake machete | 08/19/25 | | Khaki naked garrison giraffe | 08/19/25 | | Exciting bonkers keepsake machete | 08/19/25 | | Sticky lake theater | 08/19/25 | | angry cruise ship | 08/19/25 | | Low-t charismatic foreskin | 08/19/25 | | Exciting bonkers keepsake machete | 08/19/25 | | angry cruise ship | 08/19/25 | | Khaki naked garrison giraffe | 08/19/25 | | angry cruise ship | 08/19/25 | | Scarlet state lettuce | 08/19/25 | | Razzle-dazzle anal brunch | 08/19/25 | | Peach university | 08/19/25 | | Glittery piazza community account | 08/19/25 | | Vibrant affirmative action | 08/19/25 | | Glittery piazza community account | 08/19/25 | | Ebony heaven | 08/19/25 | | exhilarant carmine school nibblets | 08/19/25 | | Glittery piazza community account | 08/19/25 | | Rose personal credit line | 08/19/25 | | translucent fanboi | 08/19/25 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: August 19th, 2025 1:09 AM Author: ruby stag film marketing idea
https://www.wsj.com/opinion/work-life-balance-will-keep-you-mediocre-25bdf073?mod=hp_opin_pos_1
‘Work-Life Balance’ Will Keep You Mediocre
For financial freedom by age 30, optimize ruthlessly during your peak physical and cognitive years.
What if I told you that the notion of work-life balance is keeping a generation from reshaping the global economy?
I’m 22 and I’ve built two companies that together are valued at more than $20 million. I’ve signed up my alma mater as a client, connected with billionaire mentors and secured deferred admission to Stanford’s M.B.A. program. When people ask how I did it, the answer isn’t what they expect—or want—to hear. I eliminated work-life balance entirely and just worked. When you front-load success early, you buy the luxury of choice for the rest of your life.
In 2020 when I entered Miami University in Ohio, I calculated that I had roughly 1,460 days to build something meaningful before the “real world” demanded that I conform to a traditional career after graduation. That works out to 35,040 hours. Most students subtract sleep (8 hours a day), classes (6 hours), and basic necessities (2 hours), leaving them with 8 hours a day to spend on “life”—entertainment, clubs, dating, hanging out with friends and other activities that rarely move the needle on long-term goals.
I took a different approach and spent my time building a social-media company from my dorm room. That business, Step Up Social, helped companies grow on TikTok and Instagram Reels. It hit $1 million a year in revenue in less than two years. During my first year working on Step Up Social, I averaged 3½ hours of sleep a night and had about 12½ hours every day to focus on business. The physical and mental toll was brutal: I gained 80 pounds, lived on Red Bull and struggled with anxiety. But this level of intensity was the only way to build a multimillion-dollar company.
My approach reflects a broader shift among successful young entrepreneurs. The traditional path—college, corporate career, 401(k), retirement—delivers diminishing returns. People barely older than we are have disrupted entire industries. We understand that the window for building something meaningful is narrow, and the tools to do it often are already in our hands.
Older generations call this pace unsustainable, but I call it front-loading success. My peers who have made similar choices also are taking advantage of unlimited access to information, global markets and productivity tools with the goals of making money and, crucially, creating options for ourselves.
The median starting salary for U.S. college graduates is $55,000, which means earning your first million takes years. But if you optimize ruthlessly during your peak physical and cognitive years, you could achieve financial freedom by 30 and buy yourself choices for the rest of your life.
Building wealth this way requires sacrifices most people aren’t willing to make. Here’s what that looked like for me:
• Outsource everything nonessential. I hired a cleaning lady, subscribed to meal delivery services, and cut out every task that could be done by someone else for less than what my time was worth according to our business’s hourly rates. When your company is generating thousands of dollars a day, spending $100 to skip grocery shopping is a no-brainer.
• Prune social networks. I filtered every social commitment through three questions: Would I rather be building my company or spending time on this? Will this relationship survive if I skip this event? And if not, is this someone I really need in my life? The isolation was painful, and some friendships didn’t survive. This approach may sound harsh, but it’s about giving priority to the kind of relationships that can weather your ambitions, rather than those that require constant maintenance through surface-level social events.
• Optimize academic life. From the start, I treated college like a business decision. I gave priority to classes graded purely on exams rather than attendance, and did my best to attend only if the subject matter was related to my business ventures or business interests. I steered clear of courses that banned laptops in the classroom, because I couldn’t be offline for three or more hours a day when my team (and clients) needed me. Plus, it isn’t 1999, and that kind of thinking won’t get us anywhere.
• Adopt a zero-base calendar. Every commitment had to justify its place on my calendar, with social events, casual hangouts and even family gatherings weighed against business priorities. I constantly felt guilty about missing important moments with loved ones, but, ironically, the relationships that mattered most grew stronger, because the time I did spend with them was deeply intentional.
• Optimize transportation. This one is unconventional, I’ll admit, but I’ve used helicopters to cut travel time between meetings. It may sound excessive until you calculate the opportunity cost: A three-hour drive vs. a 20-minute flight frees up extra hours for closing deals, reviewing strategy or working with and mentoring my team.
I’m not suggesting that everyone eliminate work-life balance, but rather arguing that for ambitious young people who want to build wealth, traditional balance is a trap that will keep you comfortably mediocre. The path I chose was painful. There’s no sugarcoating the mental-health struggles, the physical deterioration or the social isolation that came with this intensity. But in a winner-takes-all economy, extreme efficiency during your peak physical and mental years becomes a baseline for building wealth that lasts a lifetime.
I plan to become a billionaire by age 30. Then I will have the time and resources to tackle problems close to my heart like climate change, species extinction and economic inequality. The formula is simple: Sacrifices I make now are an investment in decades of choice later.
Mr. Barr is founder of Step Up Social, managing partner of Candid Network and a co-founder of Flashpass.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49196137) |
Date: August 19th, 2025 9:57 AM Author: Insecure Brass Shrine
"In 2020 when I entered Miami University in Ohio"
Should have listened to his own advice
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49196666) |
Date: August 19th, 2025 10:08 AM Author: Ebony heaven
i mean he's right
most people just aren't that ambitious though
also this is literally just him taking out a paid ad in the WSJ
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49196694) |
Date: August 19th, 2025 10:21 AM Author: twinkling meetinghouse
and secured deferred admission to Stanford’s M.B.A. program.
and secured deferred admission to Stanford’s M.B.A. program.
and secured deferred admission to Stanford’s M.B.A. program.
and secured deferred admission to Stanford’s M.B.A. program.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49196742) |
Date: August 19th, 2025 10:59 AM Author: Exciting bonkers keepsake machete
Illiterate so can't read it but yes a HUGE non-discussed prob with Western "Civilization" is you have told ppl for multiple generations now to just CHILL, have work life balance, dont study or work too hard, the state will reduce or eliminate risk! No worries mate, u get healthcare, housing, blahblah here's some more free money during Covid etc.
Are ppl really so dumb to think u can have both this mentality and ppl who will excel to their full potential? Humans are just shit animals, they will sit on their ass if they dont have motive to work hard
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49196859) |
 |
Date: August 19th, 2025 2:24 PM Author: Rose personal credit line
Today’s gospel for the Roman Catholics
Matthew 19:23-30
Jesus said to his disciples:
“Amen, I say to you, it will be hard for one who is rich
to enter the Kingdom of heaven.
Again I say to you,
it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle
than for one who is rich to enter the Kingdom of God.”
When the disciples heard this, they were greatly astonished and said,
“Who then can be saved?”
Jesus looked at them and said,
“For men this is impossible,
but for God all things are possible.”
Then Peter said to him in reply,
“We have given up everything and followed you.
What will there be for us?”
Jesus said to them, “Amen, I say to you
that you who have followed me, in the new age,
when the Son of Man is seated on his throne of glory,
will yourselves sit on twelve thrones,
judging the twelve tribes of Israel.
And everyone who has given up houses or brothers or sisters
or father or mother or children or lands
for the sake of my name will receive a hundred times more,
and will inherit eternal life.
But many who are first will be last, and the last will be first.”
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49197624) |
Date: August 19th, 2025 2:20 PM Author: Rose personal credit line
And then you hit 30s/40s and have a midlife crisis because what will you spend your money on and you don’t know anything but how to work.
And who sleeps eight hours? But 3.5 is too few even for me. That’s crazy.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49197613) |
Date: August 19th, 2025 2:28 PM Author: angry cruise ship
"You have to work all the time to build something truly MEANINGFUL!"
*builds a bunch of fart apps no one ever heard of that got sold for way more than they're worth*
SUCCESS!
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49197641) |
Date: August 19th, 2025 3:34 PM Author: Scarlet state lettuce
“I plan to become a billionaire by age 30. Then I will have the time and resources to tackle problems close to my heart like climate change, species extinction and economic inequality”
I plan to become a billionaire then I will tackle economic inequality tp
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49197904) |
Date: August 19th, 2025 3:37 PM Author: Vibrant affirmative action
HA! I was wondering when this would get posted on XO. I’m surprised nobody has pointed out: “I gained 80 pounds”
Being 80+ pounds overweight at 22yo is absolutely not worth having a minority stake in a combined $20mm EV company.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763921&forum_id=2most#49197919) |
|
|