Why doing more work is ineffective and what works instead

Image Credits: UnsplashImage Credits: Unsplash

It doesn’t start with a breakdown. It starts with a small overreach. A late-night email. A weekend “just to catch up.” A belief that your pace defines your value.

And for Southeast Asian founders especially, there’s an extra layer. You’re not just building a company—you’re proving something. To your parents, who never quite understood why you walked away from a stable job. To your friends, who think “founder” means funding, not 3 a.m. anxiety. To yourself, because every delay feels like a personal failing.

So you do more. You absorb the marketing, fix the client drama, stay in the product loop. Your hands are in everything. You say it’s temporary. But your body starts calling it permanent.

When you’re in that headspace, the company doesn’t become leaner. It becomes founder-dependent. Every decision routes back to you—not because you want control, but because letting go feels like a risk you can’t afford.

You may still be hitting metrics. The team may be growing. But the internal systems? Fragile. The ops lead doesn’t truly own delivery. The designer defers instead of pushing back. People sense your exhaustion but mirror your pace. The unspoken rule is: if the founder’s still online, the day isn’t done.

That’s not scale. That’s orbiting burnout with a brave face.

The wake-up call isn’t always dramatic. For some, it’s a missed family moment that lands heavier than expected. For others, it’s an investor call that should’ve felt like a win—but leaves you numb.

I once sat with a founder who said: “I launched the feature we’d worked on for months, but I felt nothing. I closed the laptop and cried. Not because I failed. But because I couldn’t remember the last time I felt fulfilled.”

That’s the moment many founders reach before they realise they’ve confused motion for meaning. They’ve internalised “more” as the only acceptable state.

The rebuild doesn’t begin with rest. It begins with redefinition. Start with a brutally honest question: If you stopped doing, who would you be? If you weren’t the one fixing, checking, building—what remains?

One founder I mentored ran an experiment: for two weeks, they stopped joining every team meeting. No Slack messages after 6pm. They even blocked Sundays without any “just checking” moments. The first three days felt unbearable. Then something shifted. A teammate stepped up. A problem resolved without escalation. And the founder began to feel something unfamiliar—trust.

Another founder rebuilt by enforcing a three-task daily limit. Not because of a productivity hack, but because they needed a way to separate impact from busyness. Their filter became: “Would this move the business without me in the room?” That question became a compass. Fulfillment returned—not because they were doing less, but because what they were doing finally felt aligned.

This wasn’t a time management issue. It was an identity rewrite.

So many founders, especially in first-gen or high-pressure cultures, inherit the belief that work validates worth. But when you’ve internalised achievement as survival, fulfillment feels suspicious. You second-guess rest. You over-attach to being needed. You confuse depletion with purpose.

Here’s the truth no one told us early: Burnout isn’t the opposite of success. It’s often what success looks like when you’ve skipped emotional integration. When the wins don’t land, when you can’t stop moving, when every moment of stillness feels like failure—that’s not ambition. That’s a system failure in your definition of “enough.”

If you’re reading this while quietly holding it together—take this as your pause. You don’t need a new Notion template. You don’t need a silent retreat. You need a new lens. One where fulfillment isn’t the end goal, but the design principle.

Start with a question, not a fix:
What would my company look like if it didn’t depend on my over-functioning?
Who would I be if I trusted outcomes instead of activity?

You’re not lazy for wanting ease. You’re not weak for feeling tired. You’re just done with the version of success that asks you to disappear to make it happen. And that’s not burnout. That’s clarity.


Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege

Read More

Investing World
Image Credits: Unsplash
InvestingJune 12, 2025 at 7:30:00 PM

Why your investing portfolio needs to go international

Let’s get real: the average Gen Z or millennial portfolio today is still very US-heavy. Between S&P 500 ETFs, tech stocks, and US-based...

Financial Planning World
Image Credits: Unsplash
Financial PlanningJune 12, 2025 at 7:00:00 PM

Why younger workers are planning for their flextirement now

A slow shift, a louder signal: how millennials and Gen Z are restructuring work to pace—not escape. On Slack, they’re declining calendar invites...

Relationships World
Image Credits: Unsplash
RelationshipsJune 12, 2025 at 7:00:00 PM

Dog allergy symptoms and treatment

A few years ago in Oak Brook, Illinois, Gail Friedman started noticing something odd about her Parson Russell Terrier. He wouldn’t stop licking...

Careers World
Image Credits: Unsplash
CareersJune 12, 2025 at 6:30:00 PM

Is a pay cut worth it? What every job seeker needs to know

While tech layoffs and funding freezes dominate headlines in the West, a different signal is pulsing from fast-growing regions: skilled professionals are moving—for...

Insurance World
Image Credits: Unsplash
InsuranceJune 12, 2025 at 6:30:00 PM

Why more Singaporeans are downgrading their integrated Shield Plans

Once a no-brainer for upwardly mobile professionals, private health insurance in Singapore is no longer the default decision it once was. For those...

Investing World
Image Credits: Unsplash
InvestingJune 12, 2025 at 6:00:00 PM

What Gen Z investors should actually learn

If you’ve ever opened your investing app after a Trump speech or tariff tweet, you know the feeling: a sea of red, your...

Relationships World
Image Credits: Unsplash
RelationshipsJune 12, 2025 at 5:30:00 PM

How to support an empath child without dimming their light

Some children rearrange the emotional furniture of a room simply by being in it. They absorb the tension before words are spoken. They...

Politics World
Image Credits: Unsplash
PoliticsJune 12, 2025 at 5:00:00 PM

Why US defense chief's attack on China will not be well received in Southeast Asia

At this year’s Shangri-La Dialogue, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth delivered what was perhaps the most strident attack yet on “communist China,”...

Transport World
Image Credits: Unsplash
TransportJune 12, 2025 at 5:00:00 PM

Why do new tires have rubber hairs

You’re in the driveway, admiring your freshly installed tires. Smooth black rubber, perfectly grooved tread—and then, those strange wiry little spikes sticking out...

Economy World
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJune 12, 2025 at 4:00:00 PM

How Europe might be Southeast Asia's safeguard against the US-China trade conflict

The European Union’s revived interest in Southeast Asian trade ties cannot be viewed as just another regional diplomacy gesture. At a time when...

Culture World
Image Credits: Unsplash
CultureJune 12, 2025 at 4:00:00 PM

Why team ownership clarity breaks down in early-stage startups

Most early startup teams aren’t short on ideas. They’re short on clarity. A founder shares a great direction in standup: “Let’s relaunch the...

Culture World
Image Credits: Unsplash
CultureJune 12, 2025 at 4:00:00 PM

The team didn’t quit—but they stopped caring

We built the team with care. Thoughtfully. Deliberately. No ego hires. No toxic velocity plays. Just people who believed in the problem as...

Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege
Load More
Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege