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Most things don’t break because they’re bad ideas.
In this episode, I speak directly to you about why simplicity — not sophistication — is what allows anything to grow without exhausting you.
As things start working, the natural instinct is to add more:
We explore:
- Why complexity feels intelligent but quietly increases friction
- How overengineering drains energy and kills momentum over time
- The difference between “smart systems” and sustainable ones
- Why simple structures survive bad days — complex ones don’t
- And how removing, not adding, often creates real scale
This isn’t about minimalism for appearance.
Listen when things are growing… but starting to feel harder.
Simplicity isn’t small.
By Siddharth Rajsekar5
44 ratings
Most things don’t break because they’re bad ideas.
In this episode, I speak directly to you about why simplicity — not sophistication — is what allows anything to grow without exhausting you.
As things start working, the natural instinct is to add more:
We explore:
- Why complexity feels intelligent but quietly increases friction
- How overengineering drains energy and kills momentum over time
- The difference between “smart systems” and sustainable ones
- Why simple structures survive bad days — complex ones don’t
- And how removing, not adding, often creates real scale
This isn’t about minimalism for appearance.
Listen when things are growing… but starting to feel harder.
Simplicity isn’t small.