Less F’s - More Joy! (And Why That Might Be the Most Strategic Move You Make This Year)

Today, I read a piece from Harvard Business Review about how leaders underestimate the value of employee joy.

And I had two immediate thoughts:

  1. Finally, someone said it.

  2. Also… how are we just now figuring this out?

Because if you’ve led teams for more than five minutes, you already know this:

People don’t burn out from work.
They burn out from how the work feels.

The Shift I Didn’t Plan

Lately, I’ve been operating with a new, highly scientific strategy:

Give less f*#%s. Have more joy.

(Not zero f’s. I’m still employed. Let’s be reasonable.)

But I stopped:

  • Carrying projects that weren’t mine

  • Over-functioning for broken systems

  • Ignoring the very obvious signals from my body that said, “this pace is not sustainable”

And something unexpected happened.

My energy didn’t dip.
It skyrocketed.

My performance didn’t suffer.
It got more intentional… more precise… more effective.

Almost like… removing unnecessary pressure actually improves results.

Wild concept.

Where Leaders Get This Wrong

Most organizations are still operating under one very flawed assumption:

Pressure = Performance

It doesn’t.

Pressure creates compliance.
Joy creates commitment.

And according to research highlighted by Harvard Business Review:

  • Employees experiencing joy are more engaged

  • They perform better

  • They are significantly less likely to leave

Translation:
You can push people harder… or you can create an environment where they actually want to show up.

Only one of those scales.

The Lie We’ve Been Sold

Somewhere along the way, “professionalism” became code for:

  • Ignore your instincts

  • Power through exhaustion

  • Measure output at the expense of experience

We’ve normalized leaders who:

  • Miss every signal their team is struggling

  • Confuse urgency with importance

  • Treat humans like line items in a forecast

And then we act surprised when engagement drops and attrition spikes.

What Changed When I Let Go

When I stopped gripping everything like it was life or death…

I got clearer.

I made better decisions.

I stopped reacting and started leading again.

Turns out, when everything feels urgent, nothing actually is.

A Better Way to Lead

This isn’t about lowering standards.

It’s about raising awareness.

Leaders who get this right:

  • Pay attention to energy, not just output

  • Respect capacity (their own and others)

  • Know the difference between real pressure and manufactured chaos

  • Create environments where people can actually think, not just respond

Because here’s the truth:

None of this matters as much as we pretend it does.

And ironically…
That’s exactly what makes people better at their jobs.

Final Thought

There’s a line from Ted Lasso where Danny Rojas says:

“Football is life… but also, football is death… but mostly football is life.”

I’d like to offer a slight leadership remix:

Work matters. But it’s not everything.
And when you loosen your grip just a little…
you might find a lot more joy on the other side.

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