On fulfillment, false binaries, and choosing what actually works for you. When Iām asked what I do for fun, my answer is often simple: My work is fun. That response is usually met with discomfort. Sometimes disbelief. Sometimes subtle judgment. āOh, so you donāt have boundaries.ā āThat doesnāt sound healthy.ā āYouāll burn out.ā Itās rarely said with curiosity. More often, itās dismissalārooted in the assumption that work and enjoyment must live on opposite sides of a line. But that assumption isnāt universal. And it isnāt always true. The Story Weāve Been Taught About Work Many people experience work as something to recover from. It drains them. It limits them. It requires escape. So hobbies become a counterweightāa way to disconnect, cope, or reclaim parts of themselves that feel unavailable during the workday. That makes sense if work is depleting. But not all work is. When Work Is a Source of Energy For some of us, work is not just laborāitās expression. Itās where curiosity lives. Where creativity has structure. Where thinking, problem-solving, and building feel engaging rather than exhausting. This kind of work doesnāt require recovery in the same way. Not because boundaries donāt existābut because the work itself isnāt experienced as a constant drain. Fulfillment Doesnāt Need a Counterbalance The idea that everyone needs a hobby to offset work assumes that work is inherently harmful. But what if your work: - Engages your mind - Uses your skills - Allows for creativity - Evolves as you do What if it is the place where you explore, learn, and create? In that case, hobbies arenāt missingātheyāre integrated. Reading, thinking, experimenting, writing, refining ideasāthese donāt always need a separate label to be valid sources of fulfillment. Boundaries Look Different When Youāre Aligned Boundaries are often misunderstood. Theyāre not just about separation. Theyāre about sustainability. Having boundaries doesnāt mean you must disengage from work emotionally. It means you can engage without resentment, depletion, or loss of self.