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After a long day of emails, meetings, and micro-decisions, an easy life feels like salvation. This episode examines the seduction of convenience and the psychology of decision fatigue: how constant low-stakes choices for institutions, platforms, and employers quietly drain the clarity we need for the decisions that actually shape a life. Ease promises relief, but often delivers numbness—less friction, yet less meaning. By contrasting rest with avoidance and comfort with agency, we argue that the good life is not optimized for minimal effort but structured around deliberate choice. When algorithms, exhaustion, and convenience decide for us, life feels smaller; when we accept chosen difficulty for something that matters, our decisions become our own.
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By Matt RupertSend us Fan Mail
After a long day of emails, meetings, and micro-decisions, an easy life feels like salvation. This episode examines the seduction of convenience and the psychology of decision fatigue: how constant low-stakes choices for institutions, platforms, and employers quietly drain the clarity we need for the decisions that actually shape a life. Ease promises relief, but often delivers numbness—less friction, yet less meaning. By contrasting rest with avoidance and comfort with agency, we argue that the good life is not optimized for minimal effort but structured around deliberate choice. When algorithms, exhaustion, and convenience decide for us, life feels smaller; when we accept chosen difficulty for something that matters, our decisions become our own.
Support the show