What hidden costs of working did the speaker identify?
He names chronic, pervasive stress; negative impacts on sleep, diet, and exercise; large time drains (long commute, decompression time); indirect financial costs (commute, convenience spending, taxes); and shallow workplace relationships that masked loneliness.
How did the layoff affect his physical and mental health?
After six months off work he reports marked improvements: daily 60-minute workouts, consistent 8-hour sleep, healthier meals, more energy, and the lifting of chronic anxiety and burnout symptoms.
Was this early retirement voluntary and who is he mindful of?
It was involuntary but cushioned by years of savings; he stresses that many laid-off engineers lack such a financial safety net and are facing much harder outcomes.
What practical lessons does he suggest for others questioning work's role in life?
Reevaluate how work consumes time and wellbeing, prioritize health and real friendships outside work, and where possible build financial buffers that allow choice in career transitions.