Most people are taught the same lesson from childhood: effort is virtue, busyness is good, and wanting less means there is something wrong with you.
Successfully Lazy is a short book about work, temperament, and the pressure to live in ways that do not fit who you are.
Drawing on two decades in software, consulting, and enterprise sales, Dean Hanson explores the world of Effort Theatre, the quiet trap of Moreism, and the moment he realised he was not broken, lazy, or lacking discipline..
Through the book's central metaphor of ants and leopards, Successfully Lazy offers a different way to think about work, ambition, autonomy, and what it means to build a life that actually feels good to live.
This is not a productivity guide or a manifesto against work. It is a calm, honest antidote to hustle culture, and a case for trusting your own rhythm.