Ed Smith writes on "working hard" may not be always as beneficial as modern world thinks. Quotes Bertrand Russel and Nassim Taleb.
"The idea that being good at something demands harried, exhausted martyrdom is a relatively new idea. “Only in recent history,” as Nassim Nicholas Taleb puts it, “has ‘working hard’ signalled pride rather than shame for lack of talent, finesse and, mostly, sprezzatura.” If we really want to be good at something, we should stop wasting time exhausting ourselves."