『The Enlightened Overachiever』のカバーアート

The Enlightened Overachiever

The Enlightened Overachiever

著者: Laurence Shorter
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概要

The Enlightened Overachiever is a conversation about creativity and leadership — and how to make good things happen in the world.


I’m Laurence Shorter: author, thinker, and leadership coach. My work is about joining the dots between our inner worlds — the thoughts and feelings we live with every day — and the realities we shape together, at work and beyond.


My guests include entrepreneurs, artists, teachers, and thinkers. Together, we explore what it means to be a person in the world at this moment in history — with a brain, a heart, ideas and ambitions. Where are we going, how will we get there, and what’s being asked of us next?


If you’re engaged in building anything — businesses, lives, cultures — this podcast offers new perspectives on the complex challenges we face as we reimagine the future of work, meaning, and human potential.

© 2026 Laurence Shorter
個人的成功 哲学 社会科学 経済学 自己啓発
エピソード
  • Three Good Hours a Day | Oliver Burkeman on Life, Limits and Letting Go
    2026/01/22

    Oliver Burkeman has a brutal but liberating message - you will never do it all. Accept that and the real work can begin.

    In this expansive chat, Oliver (journalist and author of Four Thousand Weeks, Meditations for Mortals, The Imperfectionist), joins me to explore the counterintuitive truth at the heart of modern life: that embracing limits is the gateway to living well.

    We talk about insecure overachieving, parenting, Zen, email, death, and the strange liberation that comes from realising it’s all going to be a mess anyway. Oliver shares his own journey from perfectionism to “imperfectionism,” and we dig into what it really means to live a finite, meaningful, creative life in the age of infinite demands.

    If you're a high-functioning procrastinator like me, battling endlessly with the hydra of your never ending self-expectations—you're going to like this.

    We cover:

    • The 4-hour workday principle
    • Insecure overachievement: the emotional engine behind ambition
    • Why facing our mortality clarifies things
    • Zen, Stoicism, and the power of giving up
    • How parenthood changes your relationship with time
    • Email overwhelm, control-freakery, and the illusion of perfect systems
    • Internal Family Systems (IFS), Focusing and the many parts within us
    • What organizations and leaders can learn from “imperfectionism”
    • Whether meaningful societal change can emerge from individual awakening
    • Morning pages and the one practice Oliver always returns to

    Why Listen:

    If you ever feel crushed under the weight of your own dreams, stuck in a loop of planning without doing, or haunted by the feeling that you will die unfulfilled—this conversation will soothe you with a balm of friendly rationality and offer poetic license to just be and do the best you can.

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    1 時間 16 分
  • The Disengaged Teen meets the Enlightened Overachiever - with Jenny Anderson
    2026/01/22

    This episode is apparently about teenagers, but it's really about us ('grown ups').

    Jenny Anderson is an award-winning journalist, former New York Times reporter, and co-author of The Disengaged Teen. Underpinned by impressive research, Jenny and her co-author have flagged an important and timely narrative about the crisis of disengagement in education — and why it says as much about adult life and modern work as it does about kids.

    Across education, parenting and careers, our biggest problem is not performance but the erosion of self-directed meaning. What Jenny calls Explorer Mode — the capacity to know what matters to us and pursue it flexibly — is the missing developmental thread linking disengaged teens to disenchanted adults.

    I invited this conversation to help me understand — as an adult — why my drive to achieve so often trumps my desires to explore, creative and simply do what I feel like (vs what I 'should' be doing).

    To to this end, Jenny introduces a powerful framework for understanding learning through four modes: the Passenger, the Resistor, the Achiever, and the Explorer. We unpack why achievement can coexist with anxiety and emptiness, how agency matters as much as effort, and why curiosity — not compliance — is the missing ingredient in most learning systems. The conversation moves beyond schools to some of the biggest themes of our time: presence vs productivity, neurodiversity, and the pressure many of us feel to optimise our own and our children’s lives.

    And we turn our sights on the adult world — where many high-performing professionals find themselves successful on paper, but disconnected from meaning, creativity or joy. What would it look like to live less in “achiever mode” and more as an explorer? And how early do we need to practice that skill?

    This is a conversation about learning, agency and what it really means to thrive — for teenagers, parents, and grown-ups alike.

    Topics we explore include:

    • Why disengagement is often a rational response to environmental factors
    • The hidden cost of achievement without feeling control
    • Neurodiversity, misfit environments, and the myth of the “normal” learner
    • What schools, workplaces, and societies reward — and what they erode
    • How “explorer mode” might be the most important life skill in an AI-shaped future

    About the guest
    Jenny Anderson is an award-winning journalist and author whose work spans finance, education, parenting, and learning science. She previously reported for The New York Times and Quartz, and is the co-author of The Disengaged Teen, published in the UK and internationally in 2025.

    https://www.thedisengagedteen.com

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    1 時間 11 分
  • On Being Neighbourly and Seeing Reality as It Is — with Robert Rowland Smith
    2026/01/22

    What does it mean to see the world clearly as it is? Why do simple narratives make it so hard for us to achieve that, and to live well together?

    In this wide-ranging conversation with philosopher, author, and constellator Robert Rowland Smith we explore what it means to face reality without rushing to solutions, explanations or positions. Drawing on a life immersed in academia, business, systemic constellations, poetry, and spiritual traditions, Robert reflects on surrender, ambiguity and the fascinations that join his work together.

    In this episode we talk about the limits of rationalism and science, the illusion of human progress and global productivity culture. Along the way, Robert shares some of his personal inspirations, his vision for “Hotel Philosophy,” and the self-doubt that continues to sit alongside his prolific public creativity.

    Topics include

    • Systemic constellations and surrender vs mastery
    • Why narratives stop us seeing reality clearly
    • Ambiguity as a mark of maturity
    • The divine as immanent and transcendent
    • Productivity culture and the limits of leadership programmes
    • Art, philosophy, business, and following energy
    • Neighbourliness as service without heroics
    • Self-doubt, creativity, and continuing to show up

    Show links

    Robert's homepage - https://www.robertrowlandsmith.com/

    Philosophy Slam - www.philosophyslam.net

    YouTube - robertrowlandsmith

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    1 時間 2 分
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