Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Motivation Monday: The Great “Work-Life Balance” Dilemma
Episode Date: April 2, 2018This episode is part of a weekly series that I have dubbed “Motivation Monday.” (Yes, I know, very creative of me. What can I say, I’m a genius…) Seriously though, the idea here is simple: Eve...ry Monday morning, I’m going to post a short and punchy episode that I hope gets you fired up to tackle the workouts, work, and everything else that you have planned for the week ahead. As we all know, it’s one thing to know what you want to do, but it’s something else altogether to actually make yourself do it, and I hope that this series gives you a jolt of inspiration, energy, and encouragement to get at it. So, if you like what you hear, then make sure to check back every Monday morning for the latest and greatest installment. Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode is brought to you by me. Seriously though, I'm not big on promoting stuff that I
don't personally use and believe in. So instead I'm going to just quickly tell you about something
of mine, specifically my fitness book for men, bigger,, Leaner, Stronger. Now, this book has sold over 350,000 copies in the last several years and helped thousands
and thousands of guys build their best bodies ever, which is why it currently has over 3,100
reviews on Amazon with a four and a half star average.
So if you want to know the biggest lies and myths that are keeping you from achieving the
lean, muscular, strong, and healthy body that you truly desire, and if you want to learn the
simple science of building the ultimate male body, then you want to read Bigger, Leaner,
Stronger, which you can find on all major online retailers like Amazon, Audible, iTunes, Kobo,
and Google Play. Now, speaking of Audible,
I should also mention that you can get the audiobook 100% free when you sign up for an
Audible account, which I highly recommend that you do if you're not currently listening to
audiobooks. I love them myself because they let me make the time that I spend doing stuff like
commuting, prepping food, walking my dog, and so forth, so much more valuable and productive.
So if you want to take Audible up on this offer and get my book for free,
then simply go to www.bitly.com slash free BLS.
And that will take you to Audible.
And then you just click the sign up today and save button, create your account.
And voila, you get to listen to Bigger, Leaner, Stronger for free.
All righty.
That is enough shameless plugging for now, at least.
Let's get to the show.
It's Monday.
I like Mondays.
You want to know why I like Mondays?
Because that means it's motivation time. Mike here, of course, back with another episode of
the Most Full Life podcast, a Motivation Monday episode. Let's start with a quote. This one comes
from Alexander Smith. He said, a man's real possession is his memory. In nothing else is
he rich. In nothing else is he poor. I very much agree with that, which is why I would very
much recommend doing things to improve your memory. Check out, for example, the NBAC game,
which is scientifically proven to improve your memory. All right, so let's get into the episode
itself. And we're going to talk about work-life balance, which is something that I am asked fairly frequently about because people see that I obviously keep a lot of plates spinning and
wonder how.
Well, the answer is very simple.
One, it's not just me.
I have a very hardworking team of people, friends that really do whatever is needed
to help make sure that the show goes on.
And two, I work a lot of hours.
I don't work as many hours as I did a couple of years ago because now I have two kids. And a few
years ago, let's say three or four years ago, I had just one and he was younger. And so at that
time I was working probably 65 to 75 hours per week. And now I'm probably averaging, let's say
55 to 60 with the occasional 65 thrown in now and then,
depending on what's going on, especially these days, because I'm on multiple deadlines for
multiple book projects and digital course projects and Legion related stuff. Things
are a bit hectic right now. So, you know, like my weekends are mostly just working at this point, and my weekdays are pretty much all just working.
And that then, of course, brings us to the next question that I am often asked, which is,
how can I work that much without burning out? How do I manage that? How does that play out in terms
of work-life balance? And there's no secret here. It's very simple as I don't have a very balanced life, clearly, without much work. Where's the time? I still have to sleep,
unfortunately. And I'm okay with that because I actually think that you have to have an imbalanced
life to achieve great things. And obviously, my focus right now is on my career. I'm trying to achieve great
things in my career. I'm trying to build several businesses and sell millions of books. And there's
a three to five year plan that I am working on realizing. And to do that, it just requires a
lot of time. And that means that I'm going to have to imbalance my life to get there. I'm going
to have to sacrifice something. So what I sacrifice, for example, is free time or personal time.
I go to the gym for about an hour, five days a week. So I do have that time. That's definitely
personal time. I also spend that time to work on my German, which I'm learning. It's a good use of my rest time. Previously, I would just read while I'd be resting in between sets. Now I work on my German and I'm making good progress. But beyond that, you know, maybe I have a little bit of wiggle room on the weekends. But if I'm taking time away from work on the weekends, it's usually just spend time with my family. And I spend some time with my family every every weeknight and that's about it. So I'm not really hanging out with friends. I don't have any hobbies
outside of reading, which I do early in the morning. I wake up at five 30 and I hop in my
infrared sauna for at least 30 minutes and I read during that time. So I get at least 30 minutes of
reading in per day, but I'm also usually putting in some extra time at night, maybe another 30 minutes, and then also some audio book time. And then I have my German,
which I do while I'm resting during my workouts. So beyond that, there are no other hobbies right
now that I'm giving time to. And I don't hang out with friends really. I work out with a friend and
I have some friends at the gym. So that's kind of also my friend time is at the gym working out together. Most of that time is working on German.
But then once that's done, I get that done first. So that's probably about 30 minutes, maybe 40
minutes of my workout is when I'm resting is spent working on my German. And then there's, you know,
20 or 30 minutes that I'll just kind of shoot the
shit with my friends. And yes, that is an imbalanced life. Is it sustainable for the
long-term? For me, honestly, probably yes. I think I could probably continue like this for the rest
of my life without any real issues. I think though, if I were to do that, I would be missing
out on other things that life has to offer. That's for sure.
But I think I'm strange or unique or whatever in that regard that I get a lot of personal
satisfaction out of doing things that I feel are purposeful, that I feel have a clear purpose.
I know why I am doing this and work, of course, provides that.
this and work of course provides that and it also for me provides that flow experience right where i can really apply myself to something really focus all of my attention on it really concentrate
on it become absorbed in it lose track of time make progress get feedback improve my skills and
so forth i just really enjoy that process. And of course, work is a very
easy way to tap into that. That said, a work-life balance lesson that I have learned over the years
is it's okay to let your life become very imbalanced, but you have to be aware of where
the imbalances are and how imbalanced things are, or it can rebound negatively. So for example, I've experienced this in my
relationship with my wife because like I had mentioned earlier in this episode, years ago,
I was working even more than I am now and I didn't give her that much time. There would be
extended periods of a few weeks where we really wouldn't spend that much time together because I would just be working. And we do fit very well together because Sarah is
not a needy person and she very much understands why I'm working hard and she's very much supportive
of that. Obviously, it's in her own self-interest, but she also knows how much my work means to me,
how much I enjoy working and what the bigger picture is, what we are working toward as a family. However, you can only
neglect a relationship for so long before it just begins to strain at the seams. And so I've had to
learn that lesson a few times where I'll just let things get too imbalanced. I'll get too immersed
in my work for too long and really not come up for air for anything. And so now I'm better in that regard where I am. I'm okay with severe imbalances in my personal time and in my social time. I don't really care about those areas and there's no one, like I don't get mad at myself and my friends understand.
I work, really my friends are the people I work with.
Those are the people that, you know, I spend the most time with, which I guess there is
a, there is some overlap there.
However, when we're at the office, we're really working.
We're not just kind of shooting the shit and working a few hours a day.
All of us are working intently and sure there are little breaks here and there, little
interactions, but it's not the same.
It's not the same as like going out and really just having fun or hanging out or,
or being friends or, you know, cultivating a friendship, but I'm okay with those areas
becoming severely imbalanced because of course they understand. And again, it's in their self
interests to have me work as hard as possible because then that then that ripples out to affect their lives positively.
But my relationship with Sarah and my kids, that's where I've learned to be better in just
sticking to a schedule almost of making sure that I'm consistently putting time there and
allowing that to go by the board because I don't really want to reap that whirlwind
because it comes inevitably. I've seen it multiple times with people that I've known
over the years who are very successful in their careers and very dedicated to their careers,
but who really didn't pay attention to their marriages and their families at all.
And eventually lost them, not literally, but divorce and then the kids leave and then they're
left with all their money and all their success.
And of course, later in life, I've spoken with people who looked back and said that was probably one of the biggest mistakes they made was allowing their family to disintegrate for the sake of
their personal and professional goals. And especially when they could have just taken
some time away from those things and put it in their families to prevent the collapses.
And they would have, in the end, probably achieved the same amount of personal and professional success, maybe just a little bit slower.
It would have taken 20% more time, but they would have had the people they love to be there and celebrate it with them. So anyways, I don't want to go down that road. So I am better
these days with making sure that I don't sacrifice everything on the altar of work and productivity.
I don't mind sacrificing most things, but there are some things I do not want to sacrifice.
Now, usually when I talk about this kind of stuff with people, they wonder why I enjoy working so
much. Is it just because of the sense of purpose
or is it more about the material things? And while there's no question that I'm driven by a pretty
simple desire just to be helpful to others and do things that are useful to others. And while,
of course, I like money and I like nice things just as much as the next person. I'd say that those factors alone don't
really comprise the full why for me. And some people think maybe, oh man, there's just a darker
side. Is work an existential reassurance or maybe a hedge against emptiness as Tim Kreider wrote
about? Or maybe I'm just trying to avoid other areas of my life or numb some kind of
undesirable feeling or fill voids or no, no, no. He's just really addicted to busyness in the same
way that other people are addicted to alcohol and sex. And I really don't think it's any of those
things. None of that really resonates with me, but the nature of self-awareness being what it is,
it's kind of hard to, I guess, rule all of them out altogether. I don't desire just to be busy for the sake of being busy. And I really don't have
any kind of gaping wounds in my personal life that I'm running away from. And I really don't
care about looking or sounding important or interesting to other people. I can happily
enjoy my time away from work, but I am generally looking forward to getting back at it. And why is that? Well, an answer that I've come across that at least makes sense to me is expressed in a Let, oh, let me never falter. No, there is no empty dreaming.
Low these trees, but bare poles seeming, yet will yield both food and shelter. In other words,
I just like making stuff. I just like making stuff happen. I'd say if I'm addicted to anything, it's
to seeing my ideas and plans manifested in the real world and to seeing them work as I had anticipated,
at least partly. Of course, plans never go as planned, but you can go into something with a
vision of what something could be. And to bring that into reality is just fun. That's more
thrilling to me than walking my dogs or riding my bike or watching movies. And the fact that other people
also find my ideas helpful and are willing to pay me for them just makes it all the better.
And that for me, I think is really why I like to work. I like being able to look at something
physical, real and working and just know that I did that. And so that's why I work a lot more than I play.
I don't believe in TGIF. I don't check my calendar for upcoming holidays. I just mostly work on
holidays. And if I don't, there'll be family days. I don't fantasize about getting away from it all,
which makes me think of a Seth Godin quote. He said, instead of wondering when your next
vacation is, maybe you should set up a life you don't need to escape from. Richard Branson said something similar. He said,
if you hide under the covers because you can't face another day of the same old grind, you clearly
need more change in your life. If you leap out of bed precisely because today everything is going to
be different and something is sure to surprise you, then you're halfway there already. And in my experience, as far as burnout goes and using ideas about work-life balance as a hedge against burnout,
as a shield against burnout, this usually just boils down to laziness. The people that I've known
that cared the most about that were the type of people that, you know, if you send them back a
couple hundred years, they would complain non-fucking-stop about the work conditions.
And they probably would just wind up starving to death.
Because whatever you think is too much is what becomes too much.
If you want an excuse to underachieve, then simply decide that you are exhausted by 5 p.m. every day.
Tell yourself that you couldn't possibly do more.
You have to go home and hit the
couch and put on Netflix, or you have to go play Xbox. And sure, you're going to find plenty of
sympathy among friends and peers, and you will be absolutely right. If you haven't set up for
yourself goals, purposes, and plans that really compel you, that challenge you, that interest you,
then mental and physical lethargy are just inevitable.
Napoleon Bonaparte once said that sometimes death only comes from a lack of energy. On the other
hand, if you have something worth working toward and you decide that 80 hours of work per week
is not going to be exhausting, in fact, it's going to be invigorating, it may actually become
invigorating. And I've experienced this in my own work,
which has gone from me by myself, writing a book to recruiting Jeremy, where it was just me and him
working together to now 20 something of us. I don't even know the final number because not
everyone is here in the office. And along the way, the nature of my work changed quite a bit.
It went from spending a lot of time creating content, researching, writing. I guess recording podcasts came a little bit later.
In the beginning, it was really just researching and writing, which is something that I've
always enjoyed and always will enjoy.
Over time, that kind of turned into being more of a manager and more of an administrator
running the business, managing the people.
There was a point where even I was feeling a little bit demotivated, I guess. I still would just put in the time, put in the people. And there was a point where even I was feeling a little bit demotivated,
I guess. I still would just put in the time, put in the hours, I guess, because I have good
self-discipline and self-control and I don't really care about my feelings, at least in the
context of work. If I know that something needs to get done, it's going to get done regardless
of how I feel about it. But the long story short is I've learned that I don't like running a business. I don't like managing people. I like working and I like working with
highly competent people on interesting projects, but I'm not really interested in becoming a great
chief operating officer. For example, I'm not that into taking something that's working and
just figuring out how to make it more efficient, how to get more output from less input.
Of course, I know those are very valuable skills and that's why now I have other people
in my businesses that do these things.
But I just realized that it's that type of work that I can do it because I'm pretty good
at learning things and I'm pretty good at doing things if I set my mind to them.
But I don't
really enjoy them. Not in the same way as I enjoy writing or researching, which I am just naturally
drawn toward. And so that's why I decided to offload all those types of jobs onto other people
and get back to the work that not only I enjoy the most, but that I also think is the highest
and best use of my time,
which is stuff like this, recording podcasts, creating content, recording podcasts, recording
videos, writing books, writing articles. And that shift has really reinvigorated me.
And getting back to this point was also enjoyable, even though I had to do a lot of work that I
didn't particularly enjoy. Now I had a purpose for doing it. I knew
why I am working through this and putting all this stuff in place so I can get back to the
stuff that I do enjoy more and that I think contributes more toward our bigger goals.
I think it's more important that I'm writing books, writing articles, recording videos,
recording podcasts, then managing the day-to-day details, managing logistics and the people of the
businesses. Now, if I felt differently about that, if I felt that the best thing I could be doing
was managing the businesses, then I probably would actually feel differently about the work.
See, part of the problem for me was it felt like there wasn't a good reason for me to be doing this
stuff, that I really actually should be doing something else, again, to get to where I want to be over the next
three to five years. I have some big goals I want to achieve and running the businesses and getting
stuck in the day-to-day would probably mean that I don't get there. Or if I did end up getting there
despite that, it would have been by a lot of luck. And so anyways, bringing this back to
work-life balance, what I think the
crux is you have to find your balance. And that means you have to reconcile your ambitions with
your time, with your actions. If you're like me and you have a strong desire to make good things
happen in your life and the lives of others, and if you don't do enough of that stuff, then your life is going to feel out of balance.
I think that leisure time and idleness has value for sure, but I also kind of look at it like a
medicine. If you take too much, it just makes you sicker than you were before you started taking it.
On the other hand, if you're not really concerned with all of that and your ambition is more just to
have a good time, relax, play, then I don't see
any reason why you should even feel compelled to stay busy all the time or feel guilty for not
working as much as the next person. Just because you could burn your candle at both ends doesn't
mean that you have to. Makes me think of a Bob Dylan quote. He said, what's money? A man is a
success if he gets up in the morning and goes to bed at night and in between does what he wants to do. So in the end, you really just have to decide what
do you want to do? Do you want to make stuff happen or do you want to luxuriate? And if it's
the former, then just go do it. And who cares what other people think? People love to criticize and
disparage what they don't understand and also what they wish they had, what they envy.
Hegel said that to be independent of public opinion is the first and formal condition of
achieving anything great. I think that's very true. And especially these days where the hive
mind is getting stronger and stronger and it's becoming heresy to think a thought that isn't in line with
the cultural orthodoxy that we're all supposed to accept unquestioningly and worship. If on the
other hand though, you do just want to take it easy, then I would say embrace that and be resolute
in your idleness. Spend time with the people you love and be very careful with your obligations.
Don't saddle yourself with too much responsibility.
And I guess just generally live for yourself.
I mean, to me, that sounds like a terrible life just to be a zero, a nothing.
And it's also kind of ironic considering that we wouldn't be able to do that if we didn't have a world full
of the inventions and creations of the group of people who sacrificed everything to put them there,
but not everybody is going to join that group. this episode and found it interesting and helpful. And if you did, and don't mind doing me a favor
and want to help me make this the most popular health and fitness podcast on the internet,
then please leave a quick review of it on iTunes or wherever you're listening from.
This not only convinces people that they should check the show out, it also increases its search
visibility and thus helps more people find their way to me and learn how to build their best
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then just subscribe to the podcast and you won't miss out on any of the new goodies.
Lastly, if you didn't like something about the show, then definitely shoot me an email
at mike at muscleforlife.com and share your thoughts on how you think it could
be better. I read everything myself and I'm always looking for constructive feedback. So
please do reach out. All right, that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode.
And I hope to hear from you soon. And lastly, this episode is brought to you by me. Seriously,
though, I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in.
So instead I'm going to just quickly tell you about something of mine, specifically my fitness
book for men, bigger, leaner, stronger. Now this book has sold over 350,000 copies in the last
several years and helped thousands and thousands of guys build their best bodies ever, which is why it currently has
over 3,100 reviews on Amazon with a four and a half star average. So if you want to know the
biggest lies and myths that are keeping you from achieving the lean, muscular, strong, and healthy
body that you truly desire, and if you want to learn the simple science of building the ultimate male body, then you want
to read Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, which you can find on all major online retailers like Amazon,
Audible, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play. Now, speaking of Audible, I should also mention that
you can get the audio book 100% free when you sign up for an Audible account, which I highly recommend that you do if you're not
currently listening to audiobooks. I love them myself because they let me make the time that I
spend doing stuff like commuting, prepping food, walking my dog, and so forth so much more valuable
and productive. So if you want to take Audible up on this offer and get my book for free, then simply go to www.bitly.com slash free BLS. And that will take you to Audible. And then you just click the sign up today and save button, create your account and voila, you get to listen to Bigger, Leaner, Stronger for free.