Beyond Horizyns EP 002: Detoxing from Hustle Culture for more Productivity cover art

Beyond Horizyns EP 002: Detoxing from Hustle Culture for more Productivity

Beyond Horizyns EP 002: Detoxing from Hustle Culture for more Productivity

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

When was the last time you truly rested? Not scrolled. Not caught up on emails. Not meal prepped while listening to a productivity podcast. Actually rested — without guilt.

If that question made you uncomfortable, this episode is for you.

We live in a culture that has quietly convinced us that exhaustion equals dedication, that being busy is the same as being productive, and that ambition and rest are opposites you have to choose between. But what if that entire framework is not only wrong — it's actively working against everything you're trying to build?

In this episode of Beyond Horizyns, we're taking an honest, research-backed look at hustle culture — what it actually is, where it came from, and what it's costing us in ways most people never stop long enough to notice.

We dig into the real science, including a landmark study published in the American Journal of Epidemiology that found working more than 55 hours a week produces cognitive decline equivalent to aging 7.5 years. We look at what chronic stress does to the brain at a neurological level — including how sustained cortisol elevation literally shrinks the hippocampus, the part of your brain most responsible for memory, learning, and emotional regulation. And we examine a 2021 Lancet meta-analysis linking long working hours to a 35% higher risk of stroke and a 17% higher risk of dying from heart disease.

This is not a wellness platitude. This is documented physiological harm — and it's worth knowing.

But we don't stop at what's wrong. We also explore what ancient traditions across the globe have understood for thousands of years — from the Jewish practice of Shabbat, to the Taoist concept of wu wei, to Ayurvedic daily rhythms — wisdom that built extraordinary civilizations within a structure that honored rest as essential, not optional.

And then we get practical. Because detoxing from hustle culture is not about lowering your standards or becoming someone who stops caring. It's about learning to want big things and build big things from a nervous system that isn't running on fumes — from a brain that has the space and recovery it needs to actually perform at its highest level.

We'll also call out the snake oil on both sides of this conversation — because the anti-hustle industry has its own version of the grift, and you deserve a honest take on that too.

If you've ever felt like the grind is grinding you down but you're afraid that slowing down means falling behind — this episode was made for you.

In this episode:

  • The historical roots of hustle culture and why it became a moral identity
  • What peer-reviewed research actually shows about chronic overwork and brain health
  • The neuroscience of creativity, rest, and the default mode network
  • How ancient traditions from multiple cultures protected sustainable ambition
  • A practical five-part framework for detoxing without losing your edge
  • Why the anti-hustle industry can be just as misleading — and how to spot it
  • A Tea4Peace ritual tip rooted in behavioral science for transitioning out of work mode

Resources mentioned in this episode:

  • American Journal of Epidemiology — overwork and cognitive performance study
  • The Lancet (2021) — long working hours, stroke, and cardiovascular risk meta-analysis
  • Default Mode Network research — Kalina Christoff, University of British Columbia
  • Cal Newport — Deep Work and the four-hour deep work threshold
  • Tao Te Ching — Laozi, approximately 4th century BCE
  • Ayurvedic concept of dinacharya — daily rhythm and nervous system restoration

Connect and explore:

  • Preview the Horizyns platform and schedule your demo: www.horizynsinc.com
  • Join the Horizyns community:
No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.