2 frankvienna 0 6/3/2025, 5:21:42 PM

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frankvienna · 1d ago
Hey Hackernews,

So last week I had a complete meltdown. We’ve been losing paying customers, retention has been terrible for the past two weeks, and I hadn’t seen my girlfriend in weeks. It felt like everything was slipping through my fingers.

That's when I realized I'd been doing entrepreneurship completely backwards.

The "Always On" Trap For months I was that founder who: • Answered Slack at 11pm (and 3am, and during dinner...) • Felt guilty taking weekends off • Bragged about working 80 hour weeks like it was a badge of honor

Sound familiar? Yeah, thought so.

Here's what nobody tells you: being "always on" doesn't make you a better founder. It makes you a shitty one.

The Experiment That Changed Everything After my breakdown, I tried something radical. I set ONE rule:

No work stuff after 6pm. Period.

Not: • "Just checking emails real quick" • "One more feature before bed" Nothing. Nada. Zilch.

The first week was torture. I literally sat on my hands to stop myself from opening my laptop. My cofounder thought I was having a midlife crisis at 27.

But then something weird happened...

The Unexpected Results Week 2: Fixed a bug in 20 minutes that I'd been struggling with for days Week 3: Came up with our best marketing campaign ever (during a morning shower) Week 4: Actually enjoyed building again instead of feeling like I was drowning

Turns out your brain needs time to process stuff. Who knew?

What This Actually Looks Like My new schedule: • 9am–6pm: Deep work, meetings, all the startup chaos • 6pm onwards: Gym, cooking, reading, being a normal human • Weekends: One day completely off, one day for fun side projects

Plot twist: I get MORE done now than when I was grinding 24/7.

The Part Nobody Talks About Here's the thing: your startup won't die if you take a break. But you might.

I know three founders who ended up in the hospital last year. Burnout isn't a joke, and it definitely doesn't make you money.

My Challenge To You Try it for one week. Just one. Set a hard stop time for work and stick to it.

Your code will still be there tomorrow. That customer email can wait 12 hours. The world won't end, I promise.

Drop a comment with your biggest productivity hack. Bonus points if it involves doing LESS, not more.

Stay sane out there,