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Are We Working Our President to Death? What can we learn from the Japanese?

Creatix / June 26, 205


🏛️ Are We Working Our President to Death?

The Hidden Toll of America’s Most Demanding Job

The President of the United States is often called “the leader of the free world”. But is this leader practically a slave? 

Behind the prestigious title lies one of the most grueling, relentless, and exhausting roles in modern human society. We're a Nation of workaholics and make our President the Workaholic in Chief. From pre-dawn intelligence briefings to late-night strategy sessions, the president's schedule rarely allows for rest, let alone a normal human life. As Americans debate policies, party lines, and performance, we often overlook a basic truth: being president can be dangerously taxing to human health. 


🕰️ A 24/7 Job That Never Ends

Unlike most jobs, the presidency comes with no off-switch. Every moment—every crisis, war, market crash, natural disaster, political uprising, celebration, mourning—lands directly at the president’s face. Sleep is often interrupted by urgent calls; meals skipped for briefings; vacations cut short by emergencies; and reporters are always circling around like vultures.

A typical day may start at 6 a.m. and continue well past midnight. Even while flying on Air Force One, the workload doesn’t stop—there are speeches to revise, foreign leaders to call, and the most difficult decisions to make. This is every single day of the year. 


👴 The Aging Effect Is Real

Just look at the before-and-after photos of any modern U.S. president. The years in office appear to age them at least at twice the normal rate.

Medical researchers have debated the long-term effects, but one thing is clear: chronic stress accelerates aging, weakens the immune system, and increases the risk of heart disease, sleep disorders, depression, and cognitive fatigue.


💼 The Weight of Constant Decision-Making

Presidents are expected to:

  • Manage a multi trillion dollar budget

  • Command the U.S. military and nuclear arsenal

  • Lead responses to domestic disasters and global emergencies

  • Keep their political base happy, deal with opponents, answer the media—all at once

It’s not just the hours—it’s the decision fatigue, the moral burden, and the pressure of getting it right for the presidential legacy, every single day.


🧠 Mental Toll in the Spotlight

While mental health is gaining attention in public life, presidents rarely get the space to be human. Expressing fatigue, doubt, or emotion is often twisted into weakness. We are demanding superhuman emotional regulation from our presidents, who are only humans, fragile storytelling primates like all of us.


⏳ Are We Pushing Too Hard?

In a country obsessed with work and living the dream of constantly chasing the elusive American Dream, we expect our presidents to “never stop” working. Perhaps it’s time to ask if that expectation is sustainable—or even fair. After all, the president is only human (not AI yet). Could clearer schedules and less insane demands help preserve the health of those we elect to serve? They're not our slaves. 

The president is not a machine (yet). He's a person of flesh and bone. By the time they become president they also tend to be in their senior years. This is almost animal cruelty. We put them under unimaginable pressure, carrying the burden of killing themselves working for us. 


🔄 Final Thought

We rightly demand accountability from our leaders. But maybe we should also demand humanity from ourselves. We should encourage a balanced system that supports the president's health and wisdom for our own sake. If the presidency breaks the person holding it, the country may break too.


What can we learn from the Japanese?


🏙️ Karōshi: When Working Too Much Becomes Deadly

In Japan, there’s a word that doesn’t exist in English or almost any other language: karōshi (過労死). It means “death by overwork.” This isn’t a figure of speech—it’s a recognized social and medical problem in Japanese culture, where long working hours and relentless pressure have led to real deaths from heart attacks, strokes, and suicides.

🇯🇵 Where Did This Come From?

Karōshi began gaining attention in the 1970s and 1980s as Japan’s economy boomed and workers—especially in white-collar corporate roles—started logging 60–100 hours per week. Companies expected loyalty, long hours, and self-sacrifice. Workers often skipped vacations, stayed late, and pushed themselves to physical and mental exhaustion.

The term was coined when young and seemingly healthy employees suddenly died at their desks or took their own lives due to job-related stress. As tragic cases grew, the government acknowledged karōshi as a public health issue.

💥 What Causes Karōshi?

  • Chronic overwork (80–100+ hours/week)

  • No time for rest or recovery

  • High pressure and fear of failure

  • Social shame in quitting or saying “no”

  • Lack of work-life balance

People may die from cardiovascular failure caused by stress and lack of sleep, or suffer mental health breakdowns leading to suicide. Karōshi doesn’t just hurt the worker—it devastates families and shakes entire communities.

🧠 The Psychological Toll

Culturally, many Japanese workers feel deep pressure to not “let the team down.” In group-based office environments, individuals often feel guilt for taking time off—even if they’re sick. This mindset, combined with Japan’s aging population and shrinking workforce, adds to the strain.

Even though some companies now offer “no overtime days” or encourage remote work, old habits die hard. Employees still often stay late simply because their bosses do.

⚠️ Is This Only in Japan?

No. While “karōshi” is a uniquely Japanese word, the problem of overwork leading to burnout or death is global. In the U.S., South Korea, China, and parts of Europe, rising workplace stress and lack of boundaries are taking a toll on mental and physical health.

✅ What Can Be Done?

  • Stronger labor protections and enforcement

  • Mandatory time off and maximum hour limits

  • Mental health support in the workplace

  • Cultural change that values rest as much as productivity


💬 Final Thought

Karōshi is a harsh reminder that no job is worth your life. While hard work can be meaningful, it should never come at the cost of health, family, or human dignity. As the world watches Japan’s struggle with overwork, there's a growing awareness: rest isn't laziness—it’s survival.


Now you know it. 

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