People keep calling me “lazy.”
Which is inaccurate, unfair, and frankly outdated.
I am not lazy.
I am a highly optimized biological system currently operating in Energy Saving Mode.
Step 1: System Boot Status
When I wake up, my body does a quick diagnostic:
- Brain: 12% loaded
- Motivation: “Updating…”
- Social energy: “Error 404”
- Productivity drivers: not installed
At this stage, expecting me to function is like expecting a low-battery phone to edit a movie.
Technically possible. Morally unreasonable.
Step 2: Movement Optimization Protocol
I do move.
But only when necessary.
- Walking to the fridge → essential mission
- Getting the remote → critical operation
- Responding to messages → requires government-level approval
Everything else is postponed for “later version updates.”
Step 3: The Sit-Down Strategy
Once I sit down, I enter full optimization mode.
Standing up again requires:
- emotional preparation
- strategic planning
- reconsideration of life choices
So I simply don’t.
This is not laziness.
This is energy conservation architecture.
Step 4: Productivity Scheduling Conflict
People ask:
“Why didn’t you do it today?”
I answer:
“Today was not a high-performance day.”
Some days are:
- “focus mode”
- “social mode”
- “I can conquer the world mode”
And some days are:
- “do not perceive me” mode
It is a rotational system.
Step 5: The Recharge Myth
They say:
“Just get more sleep!”
As if sleep is a USB cable and I am a fully compatible device.
I have slept.
I have rested.
I have even done nothing professionally.
Yet somehow, the system still boots into:
“Please try again later.”
Step 6: External Pressure Detection
When someone says:
“You should be more productive.”
My system immediately responds:
- Energy: -30%
- Motivation: -50%
- Desire to exist in society: buffering
This is why external pressure is not a productivity tool.
It is a software crash trigger.
Step 7: Sudden Rare Performance Mode
Occasionally, something strange happens.
Deadlines appear.
Panic activates.
Suddenly I become:
- fast
- efficient
- terrifyingly focused
This is called:
“Emergency Power Mode”
It lasts exactly until the task is completed, then shuts down instantly like nothing happened.
Conclusion
I am not lazy.
I am:
- energy optimized
- efficiency scheduled
- motivation dynamically allocated
- and occasionally offline for system maintenance
If anything, I’m not underperforming.
I’m just conserving resources for absolutely unnecessary future emergencies I will definitely create myself.


