Being on top of every detail and being calm under pressure are not the same skill.
You've mastered the first. You've quietly abandoned the second.
Here's your Tuesday:
Awake before 7, running yesterday's risks before your feet hit the floor. By 8:15 you're fielding a timezone complaint, a blocked developer, and a "quick idea" that just blew up your scope. You still haven't eaten.
By noon: four meetings, thirty emails, sixty decisions. Lunch at your desk. Or not at all.
Then 2pm arrives. Your brain turns to wet concrete. You stare at the spreadsheet. You know what it needs. You can't make yourself do it. You snap at someone on Slack. You apologize. You work late to cover the foggy afternoon.
You call this a busy day.
It isn't. It's a body running on cortisol because you never gave it fuel or a reset.
Being busy isn't being effective. Being available isn't being valuable. Pushing through isn't leading.
The afternoon crash isn't a willpower problem. It's a physiology problem — and physiology is fixable.
The PMs who fix it don't work less. They just stop bleeding energy they could be spending on the decisions that actually move the project.
What does your 2–4pm crash actually look like? Describe it in one line below. I read every reply.
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1 comment
Thilina Fonseka
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Being on top of every detail and being calm under pressure are not the same skill.
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