That dopamine hit when you smash your to-do list? It feels amazing… until it owns you.

I’ve been there. Post-2005 firing, I ground 24/7 like a machine. The rush became compulsive. Rest felt like failure. Turns out that’s not productivity; it’s workaholism wearing a mask.

5 Red Flags You’re Addicted

  1. You check DMs at dinner and feel guilty if you don’t.
  2. A single “slow” day makes you feel like a total loser.
  3. Your phone is glued to your hand—even in the bathroom.
  4. You schedule content weeks ahead but never truly unplug.
  5. You’re physically present with family but mentally somewhere else.

The Hidden Costs

  • Relationships quietly erode (kids notice when your eyes aren’t really on them).
  • Chronic exhaustion + brain fog become your new normal.
  • Long-term output crashes—burnout kills streaks faster than laziness ever could.

3 Fixes That Actually Work

1. Audit your wins nightly Grab a physical journal. Write every win—big, small, silly. After 7 days, circle what actually moved the needle. Ruthlessly cut the rest.

2. Enforce hard stops Mine: screens off 8 PM sharp. Yours might be 5 PM or weekends 10–11 AM only. Black-and-white rules beat gray-area guilt.

3. Redefine success Gary Vee’s line nails it: some $50k earners are happier than $50M earners because they’re present. Ask yourself daily: “Is productivity serving me, or am I serving it?”

Your 7-Day Challenge

Log three “productive” days this week. Spot one compulsive task. Swap it for pure rest. 

Because all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy… and eventually breaks him.