There is a particular kind of tired that comes from work that is not especially hard, not especially meaningful, and yet somehow exhausting. You finish the day with a full calendar behind you and very little to show for it. You were present. You were responsive. You were busy. And still, something essential never quite got done.
This is where the idea of hey-hanging fits. Not laziness. Not slacking. Not disengagement. But a kind of performative busyness that fills the space where clarity, direction, or real demand should have been.
Most of us drift into it. Very few set out to.
Hey-hanging is what happens when work becomes more about appearing occupied than doing something that actually requires thought. It is the safe middle ground between effort and avoidance. You look busy. You feel busy. You stay just active enough to avoid questions, including your own.
It is tempting to frame this as a personal failing. A lack of discipline. A modern attention problem. But that reading is too simple and, frankly, unfair. Hey-hanging does not flourish in well-designed systems. It thrives in environments where expectations are unclear, priorities shift without warning, and visibility is rewarded more than substance. In other words, hey-hanging is not the cause. It is the symptom.
When busyness becomes a form of safety
Most people do not choose performative busyness because it is easy. They choose it because it feels safer than the alternatives. Deep work costs energy. It requires thinking time, uninterrupted space, and a tolerance for uncertainty. It also makes you visible in a different way. When you commit to work that matters, you risk getting it wrong. You risk disagreement. You risk silence while you think.
Hey-hanging, on the other hand, offers immediate protection. Emails answered quickly. Meetings attended. Documents opened and adjusted. Tasks that can be completed, ticked off, and shown if needed. It creates the appearance of momentum, even when the direction is unclear.
In poorly designed work environments, this behaviour is often quietly reinforced. People who are constantly available are seen as committed. People who respond quickly are seen as reliable. People who ask fewer difficult questions are seen as cooperative. Under these conditions, hey-hanging becomes less about avoidance and more about survival.
The stressors that feed the cycle
Two stressors sit at the heart of this pattern: cognitive overload and unclear expectations.
Cognitive overload is not simply about having too much to do. It is about having too many things competing for attention without a clear hierarchy. When everything is labelled urgent, nothing really is. The brain responds by defaulting to what feels manageable. Smaller tasks. Familiar actions. Work that does not require heavy thinking.
Unclear expectations make this worse. If success is poorly defined, people will optimise for visibility instead. If outcomes are vague, effort becomes the proxy. If priorities change often, committing deeply to any one piece of work feels risky.
In such environments, hey-hanging is not irrational. It is adaptive. It allows people to stay afloat without burning through what little cognitive capacity they have left. This is why simply telling people to “focus” or “work smarter” rarely helps. You cannot concentrate your way out of a system that punishes depth and rewards constant motion.
Why calling it laziness misses the point
There is a moral tone that often creeps into conversations about productivity. Busy but unproductive people are framed as inefficient or unserious. Stress is sometimes treated as a badge of honour, while ease is treated with suspicion. This framing does real damage.
First, it ignores the reality that much modern work is badly designed. Roles expand quietly. Responsibilities blur. Meetings multiply without a clear purpose. Decisions are deferred upwards or sideways. The individual is left to manage the resulting mess alone.
Second, it assumes that effort should always look a certain way. Quiet thinking, slow synthesis, and deliberate pacing rarely read as “hard work” from the outside. Yet these are often the most demanding forms of labour.
Third, it places the burden entirely on the individual to self-regulate in systems that actively undermine regulation.
Hey-hanging is not laziness. It is what happens when people are asked to function without clarity, trust, or adequate support. That does not mean individuals have no agency. It does mean the conversation needs to be more honest.
The uneasy space between responsibility and structure
It is comfortable to blame organisations. It is also incomplete. Individuals do make choices within constraints. We all recognise moments when we choose easier visible work over harder invisible work. We know what it feels like to tidy the edges instead of addressing the centre. Sometimes we stay busy because being still would force a reckoning we are not ready for.
The truth sits in the uneasy space between personal responsibility and structural failure. You can acknowledge that your workload is badly designed and still notice when you are avoiding deeper engagement. You can critique management practices and still ask yourself what you are optimising for each day. These things are not opposites. In fact, holding both perspectives is often what allows change to begin.
Burnout does not always look dramatic
Burnout is often described as a collapse. Exhaustion. Tears. A breaking point. More often, it looks like this instead: functional, competent, disengaged. You do what is asked. You respond. You attend. You do not care very much. In this state, hey-hanging becomes more frequent. Not because you do not want to contribute, but because your capacity for deeper effort has been eroded over time. Thinking feels expensive. The initiative feels risky. You default to what keeps you afloat.
This is especially common among high-functioning people. Those who are used to being capable, reliable, and self-directed. They adapt quietly. They absorb ambiguity. They keep going long after the work has stopped making sense. From the outside, they look fine. From the inside, something has flattened.
Productivity theatre and fake urgency
One of the more corrosive features of modern work is productivity theatre. The appearance of action without the substance of progress. Endless check-ins. Meetings that exist because they always have. Urgent requests that are not actually urgent. Last-minute changes that signal importance rather than necessity.
Fake urgency trains people to stay reactive. When everything is framed as critical, there is no space to distinguish what truly matters. People learn to move quickly rather than think well. Over time, this erodes trust. In the system, in leadership, and in one’s own judgment. Hey-hanging thrives in this environment because it keeps you responsive without requiring belief. Calling this out is not anti-work. It is pro-sense.
What can individuals realistically do?
It would be dishonest to suggest that individuals can fix systemic problems on their own. They cannot. But there are small, practical shifts that can reduce the pull of hey-hanging and create pockets of better work.
One is naming the real work. Not in grand mission statements, but in simple terms. What would meaningful progress actually look like this week? What would be different if this piece of work went well?
Another is noticing where visibility has replaced value. Which tasks make you look busy but move nothing forward? Which ones require more effort but less display? This is not about doing less. It is about choosing more honestly.
A third is setting gentler boundaries around cognitive load. Fewer context switches where possible. Shorter windows for shallow tasks. Protecting even small amounts of thinking time can change the texture of a workday.
And sometimes, it is about acknowledging limits. There are environments where depth is simply not supported. In those cases, the most self-respecting choice may be to stop over-investing emotionally, or to plan an exit over time.
These are not dramatic fixes. They are small acts of alignment.
What organisations need to confront
If hey-hanging is widespread, it is worth asking why. Are roles clearly defined, or do they rely on individual interpretation? Are priorities stable, or constantly shifting? Is thinking time respected, or treated as unproductive? Are people rewarded for outcomes, or for availability? Bad management often hides behind busyness. So does indecision. When leaders are unclear, teams fill the gap with activity.
Reducing hey-hanging at an organisational level requires courage. Fewer meetings. Clearer ownership. Honest conversations about what is no longer needed. Trusting people to work without constant proof. This is not about squeezing more output from people. It is about designing work that does not require constant performance to feel legitimate.
Asking better questions
Perhaps the most useful thing this concept offers is a set of questions rather than answers.
- What am I actually working towards right now?
- What would change if I slowed down instead of speeding up?
- Who benefits from my staying visibly busy?
- What am I avoiding by staying occupied?
- What would real effort look like here?
These are not comfortable questions. They are also not accusations. They are invitations to notice.
Not anti-work, not anti-effort
It is important to be clear about what this argument is not. It is not a rejection of work. It is not a call to disengage. It is not an excuse for doing less than you are capable of. It is a refusal to confuse motion with meaning. Effort matters. Care matters. Contribution matters. But effort without direction becomes noise, and care without structure becomes exhaustion. Hey-hanging is what happens when people are left to manage that gap alone.
A quieter re-design
The alternative to hey-hanging is not constant intensity. It is not heroic productivity. It is quieter, and in many ways harder. It asks for clarity instead of urgency. Trust instead of surveillance. Depth instead of display.
At an individual level, it asks for honesty about capacity and intention. At an organisational level, it asks for better design rather than better coping.
Most of us will still hey-hang from time to time. That is human. The goal is not purity. It is awareness. If this article does anything, let it be this: to help people recognise that feeling busy and feeling useful are not the same thing, and that the gap between them is not always a personal failure. Sometimes, it is simply a sign that the work itself needs to change.
