A popular theme for Substack writers is to tell cautionary tales about career burnout. It’s the younger writers on this topic who particularly resonate with me. People in their thirties or early forties who have most of their life experience ahead of them, yet are already wise enough to be asking some of the most challenging questions of themselves and of their readers:
How do I balance career and family?
How do I avoid burnout and take care of my health?
How do I keep invidious comparison and memetic desire in check?
What is true success?
What is enough?
I don’t recall asking myself these questions in my thirties, in my forties, or even in my early fifties. I can recall stress over these topics that affected my health during those years, but I kept that stress to myself until my wife intervened. I didn't write about my stress, and I didn’t have the benefit of reading about how others were confronting their stress.
Emma Gannon is one of the leading Substack writers on this theme, having suffered from her own traumatic burnout a few years ago when she was about thirty. She’s written a fluid, bestselling book about the topic called The Success Myth. 1
In her last chapter Emma offers a concise summary in the form of a triptych of precepts contrasting old success with new success.
“Success used to mean never-ending wealth. Success can now mean time wealth.
Success used to mean constant busyness. Success can now mean resting.
Success used to mean always striving. Success can now mean knowing what enough feels like.”
I’m 61 now, my kids are adults, and my formal finance career is done. So I’m at a different stage than these younger writers. I still ask the same questions, but with a different perspective and different definitions about the meaning of success and “enough.”
As to burnout, that’s one fear I’ve literally put to bed. Some in my family would say I’ve made “resting” an art form, meaning I always seem to be either “relaxing,” watching TV, or napping. Sometimes, I can “accomplish” all three intermittently at once. 2
So now for me it’s really the question of “enough” that I ponder. Materially I have more than enough and I know it.
But my questions about enough don’t stop. They become different.
I wonder about the impact I’ve had, my current relevance, and the narrowing opportunity set for future impact. The word “legacy” starts creeping into my mind. Confusingly so, for what does a legacy even mean?
And while I may no longer use balance sheets as a measure of comparison with others, I still compare myself using the far more elusive measures of impact and legacy. Sometimes the comparisons can be enlightening, sometimes they’re just as galling as any other invidious comparison/mimetic desire. 3
One of the founders of my firm, John Angelo, had a perspective on life that I find usefully challenging.
John had a “one of the boys” charm, with a full head of dark hair and an unlined face to match. Whether he was being critical or charming, he always had an air of confidence, just short of a swagger.
He made you want to be liked and approved by him.
John became an extraordinarily wealthy and successful man. He used to come into my office, however, and bemoan the existence of a few rival investment management firms that were bigger.
When I’d point out that he’d co-created a great firm, he’d shake his head and wave his hands to dismiss my attempts to soothe him. John always wanted more. “Enough” was for him a foreign concept.
I should mention that John was certainly not a classic workaholic. He had a talent for mixing leisure and family with business. He knew everyone, and when he was socializing he was deepening connections that were beneficial to the firm.
John once remarked that all the nerdy “A” students––I know he was thinking of me!––ended up working for all the sociable “C” students––definitely him.
I had no comeback to that. He was right. I was a better student and knew more than he did about most subjects. But I worked for him, and the better I did at work, the better he’d do as a founder of the firm. He’d always be richer than I’d be.
John was a lot older than I am now when he was still charging ahead to grow the firm. He succumbed to cancer in his mid-seventies, working almost to the very end.
I wonder, did John have the right idea? To live a life where he never questioned what success meant for him? Yes, he always wanted more, but it’s hard for me to credit that this desire caused him real pain or stress.
Maybe a “C” student like John, blessed with the ease that comes with a privileged background, immense charm and confidence, and force of personality, wouldn’t ask the challenging life questions that can lead to doubt and stress.
Someone looking at John and me from afar might think of us as more similar than different. Both privileged, both working in the finance industry at the same firm, both wealthy, albeit at different scales.
But because of the similarities, the differences become more instructive. I thought then, and still think, that my knowledge entitled me to encounter the world with a sharper, deeper, brighter lens than John’s. But that intellectual bent made me less likely to go all-in to my career, made me more of a questioner, more of a doubter, ultimately less sure of myself.
Over Thanksgiving, I watched the movie Oppenheimer, and it delivered an unexpected blow to my self-esteem. My intellectual lens into the world may have had an edge over John’s, but Oppenheimer’s lens was like that of a different, more highly developed species.
Oppenheimer was a polymathic genius––I’m taking the movie portrayal of him at face value. I remember watching the scene where he’s translating Sanskrit to his lover and thinking that I couldn't begin to fathom a mind that can learn languages by the dozen. I know only English.
Or the scenes where his conceptual breakthroughs in physics are represented by visions of stars, fire and flame. In retrospect, that may have been a movie director’s outlandish attempt to make thought come alive, but as I was watching the movie, I took it in as real.
As well, I compared myself to Oppenheimer’s impact on the Manhattan Project. He used his great intellect and energy to bend physics to his will and became the Project’s key scientific player, a king among princes, leaving an indelible impact on the most momentous of world events.
In contrast, I thought of the circumscribed ambit of what I could look forward to doing. That thought made me feel small and insignificant. Like Burr in Hamilton, I was far from any room where the consequential things were happening.
My envy of Oppenheimer, expressed as a feeling of inferior intellect and insufficient impact and purpose, faded once the movie ended. I realized just how ludicrous it was to compare myself with the scientist who had split the atom.
To adequately appreciate the absurdity of my comparison with scientific genius, you’d need to see me fumble with a pair of kitchen tongs or struggle to operate an electronic toaster-oven.
For the rest of the Thanksgiving weekend, I forgot about the movie. I was pleasantly distracted by family meetups, a decent Netflix binge, and Red Zone. 4
But while my transient envy of Oppenheimer had elements of absurdity, I couldn’t deny that I had felt it. My takeaway was that my sense of “enough” remained vulnerable to doubt.
Once again, from Emma Gannon’s precepts:
“Success can now mean knowing what enough feels like.”
Success is like a victory. But neither John Angelo nor Robert Oppenheimer declared victory. John because he always strived for more, Oppenheimer because his life after the use of the atom bomb was marked by profound doubts about the impact of what he’d done. Doubts that troubled his conscience and damaged for some time his reputation.
I don’t ever want to declare victory either. Because for me, it would be a Pyrrhic victory, a defeat disguised as a victory.
The phrase Pyrrhic victory comes from the Greek general Pyrrhus who Plutarch records as saying after a costly victory over the Romans in the battle of Asculum, "If we are victorious in one more battle with the Romans, we shall be utterly ruined.”
Victory for me over enough would mean victory in all aspects: not only material, but impact, and legacy. So then what would get me up in the morning?
Family and friends, sure.
But I need to feel productive, I need to feel that I’m helping people. That’s the impact I crave.
Question for the Comments:
How much free time would you want?
Office Space clip: The classic movie sendup of office life by Mike Judge, creator of Silicon Valley. We watched it last night and it held up wonderfully.
In addition to Emma, a few of the other younger writers that illuminate these questions for me with their personal essays include
andI will share a secret. Often when I’m “resting,” I’m actually reading Substack essays, commenting on them, and working on my own Substack posts.
I use the terms invidious comparison and mimetic desires as a pair as they’re both related to envy. Perhaps someone more knowledgable than I am can dissect the differences.
It’s come to my attention that some people are unfamiliar with Red Zone. So this is a Public Service Announcement. Red Zone is an enthralling, commercial free, all day Sunday live broadcast of the most consequential and exciting plays at any moment of every NFL game being played. For a football fan, it’s heaven.
Dave, you hooked me with this one! I so appreciate your thoughtful comments about “enough,” especially at this stage of your life where you do have enough. (I’m 10 years ahead of you, as is my husband, and while he’s not an avid Substack reader I know he would agree.) I was also struck by your recounting of your relationship with your boss, a hard-driving, semi oblivious, and very successful “C” student whereas you were the “A” student who worked for him. I know finance “guys” just like that. Perhaps it’s not really true that an “unexamined” life is not worth living. At any rate, thanks for a great Saturday read.
I’m realizing as I’m reading this that my biggest problem is that I never focus on one thing at a time...one isn’t enough. If I’m watching TV, I’m also trying to read something. If I’m working, I’m also trying to pay attention to a podcasts. I’ll try and shift my focus this week and let what I’m doing be enough.
Also, Oppenheimer is very similar to the book American Prometheus. Except Kitty is more sympathetic in the movie, if you can believe that.