A destructive blind spot for driven leaders is "goal-induced blindness," an obsession with measurable goals that obscures other crucial factors like ethics, health, and relationships. This can lead to personal burnout and corporate scandals like the Volkswagen emissions case.

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Constantly trying to double others' efforts leads to high achievement but erodes autonomy. Your actions become reactive and tied to external benchmarks rather than internally generated values, which can lead to unfulfillment despite success.

Many driven individuals feel they must justify rest through intense work, viewing it as a reward rather than a fundamental need. This "earn your rest" mentality leads to burnout by framing rest as an indulgence instead of a biological necessity for sustained performance.

High-achievers often get stuck in a cycle of setting and conquering goals. This relentless pursuit of achievement is a dangerous trap, using the temporary validation of success and busyness as a way to avoid confronting deeper questions about purpose and fulfillment.

Many successful people maintain their drive by constantly focusing on what's missing or the next goal. While effective for achievement, this creates a permanent state of scarcity and lack, making sustained fulfillment and happiness impossible. It traps them on a 'hamster wheel of achievement'.

A leader focused solely on personal wins creates a toxic environment that ultimately leads to their own apathy and burnout. They become disconnected from the very machine they built, creating a job they personally loathe despite their apparent success.

Setting rigid targets incentivizes employees to present favorable numbers, even subconsciously. This "performance theater" discourages them from investigating negative results, which are often the source of valuable learning. The muscle for detective work atrophies, and real problems remain hidden beneath good-looking metrics.

Many high-achievers are driven by a constant need to improve, which can become an addiction. This drive often masks a core feeling of insufficiency. When their primary goal is removed, they struggle to feel 'good enough' at rest and immediately seek new external goals to validate their worth.

An entrepreneur's drive to work far ahead, rooted in her past as a gymnast, results in a low-stress business. However, this same habit is tied to an unconscious belief that prevents her from resting, revealing how productive systems can have a detrimental personal cost.

Entrepreneurs driven by external pressures like social status or financial gain, termed "obsessively passionate," are ironically less effective. This type of passion leads to a lack of boundaries, diminished focus, and an inability to balance other life roles, ultimately hindering business performance.

Top performers often develop 'selective emotional efficiency,' a state where they only process emotions that serve their practical goals. This momentum-driven focus allows them to push through challenges but hides a state of hypervigilance and prevents deep rest, eventually leading to exhaustion when the momentum stops.