Success: Because Sleep Is For The Weak

Welcome to modern success, where eyebags are a badge of honor and sleep is treated like an embarrassing childhood habit you should have outgrown by now. If you’re getting eight hours a night, congratulations—you’re clearly not trying hard enough.
In today’s motivational ecosystem, success isn’t measured by happiness, health, or—God forbid—balance. It’s measured by how many cups of coffee you can inhale before your hands start shaking and how proudly you announce, “I only slept three hours,” like it’s an Olympic achievement. Gold medal for burnout, everyone clap.

We’ve been sold the dream that if you just grind harder, wake up earlier, and reply to emails at 2 a.m., the universe will eventually reward you with wealth, purpose, and maybe a spine that doesn’t ache permanently. Sleep, we’re told, is for people who lack ambition. Or freelancers who haven’t discovered anxiety yet.

The irony, of course, is delicious. We’re exhausted while chasing productivity tips written by people who already sold their companies and now nap professionally. We’re told to “rise and grind” by influencers who absolutely went back to bed after filming that reel.

But sure—skip sleep. Ignore the science. Forget that your brain needs rest to function, create, or remember your own name. Push through, because nothing screams “I’ve made it” like chronic fatigue, emotional numbness, and a personality powered entirely by caffeine.

So here’s to success: loud, sleepless, and slightly unhinged. Rest when you’re rich, they say. Just don’t be surprised if, by then, you’re too tired to enjoy it.

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