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After Effort

After Effort

Work, worth, and meaning after effort — and after AI

Something strange happens when the work gets easier. Instead of relief, there's a low hum of wrongness. A suspicion that if it didn't cost you something, it doesn't count.

After Effort names what most people feel but can't articulate: that ease feels like cheating, that rest feels stolen, and that an entire identity built on struggle doesn't know what to do when the struggle ends. Whether the shift came through mastery, midlife, or AI, the result is the same — a nervous system still wired for effort in a world that no longer requires it.

Drawing on Jungian psychology and somatic awareness, Kim Aronson traces how effort became fused with worth in childhood, why the body distrusts ease even when the mind knows better, and what value actually means when it's no longer measured by how hard something was to produce.

This is not a productivity book. It is not a manifesto against hard work. It is a book for anyone who has arrived at competence and doesn't know what to do with the silence — and for anyone who suspects that the next version of their life doesn't require self-punishment as proof of sincerity.

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